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Blessed are they who hunger and thirst for justice: for they shall be filled. The law of the Lord is perfect, converting the soul: the testimony of the Lord is sure, making wise the simple. Bless thou the Lord, O my soul. Let the words of my mouth, and the meditation of my heart, be acceptable in thy sight, O Lord, my strength, and my redeemer.

Author Topic: War Provocations and Peace Actions  (Read 74844 times)

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AGelbert

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SOURCE:
https://alonmizrahi.substack.com/p/the-ridiculousness-is-just-staggering/comments

Pro~Diagnosed Major Depressive Undiagnosed’s Substack Oct 25
Israel assumes other nations will always make good the non~sufficient funds checks the continuously write but cannot cover. Then viciously bites the feeding hands, demanding more, faster, right now. Childish in the extreme.

Robert Lindsay Beyond Highbrow > Pro~Diagnosed Major Depressive Oct 26
The US seems to be a bottomless pit of money for Israel.

Rachael Grey > Robert Lindsay Oct 25
An immature, narcissistic society.

Anthony G. Gelbert > Rachael Grey Oct 25
I do not think they are ignorant of the brazen EVIL (there is no way to euphemize THAT) that they methodically carry out, on a GENERATIONAL basis, since even before 1948. They KNOW what they are doing. They are a morally bankrupt, socially destructive society, but they do not see it that way, and mock anyone who does. They feel that genocidal land grabs are completely justified. How so?

The scientific principle, and yes, it really is a scientific principle, that governs their wanton EVIL is that of bacteria ring circling in a petri dish. For bacteria, it is, of course, certainly not evil, but just non-self aware organisms trying to survive by limiting the agar food supply to a limited number of "privileged" bacteria smart enough to ring circle the food supply to kill off their fellow bacterial competitors in the petri dish. That logic is biosphere math for bacteria, but is morally bankrupt for we humans. The Zionists will calmly tell you that the biosphere is our "petri dish" and they are just doing what clever, intelligent APEX Human predators MUST DO because Darwin said so (SEE DARWIN QUOTES on "LESSER" humans).


It's the Social Darwinism, not "immaturity" or "childishness". The Zionists are evil, but they are not uneducated or stupid. Their choice is a conscious choice, not one born of "ignorance".

Rachael Grey > Anthony G. Gelbert Oct 25
When I talk about "maturity," it's not about acting chronologically younger. It's more like, say, Lawrence Kohlberg's "Theory of Moral Development" from ancient of days.

Anthony G. Gelbert > Rachael Grey Oct 25
I see.
Is that kind of like Aristotle's Dianoia (the human cognitive capacity for, process of, or result of discursive thinking, specifically about mathematical and technical subjects)?

Aristotle used this term when defending his view that an "unexamined life" (his term) is not worth living. IMHO, Aristotle was spot on.

Rachael Grey > Anthony G. Gelbert Oct 25
Kohlberg's theory is based on Piaget's theory of cognitive development, which IS about the development of logical thinking in children.

Rachael Grey > Anthony G. Gelbert Oct 25
Hmm. Let me think on this. The Social Darwinism makes sense.

Read more:
https://alonmizrahi.substack.com/p/the-ridiculousness-is-just-staggering/comments''



By Larry C. Johnson October 28, 2024

SNIPPET:
What sane folks need to understand is that no amount of evidence will shake the Zionists from their delusional fantasies. It is akin to those Americans who still insist that we could have won in Vietnam. We just didn't try hard enough.

Read more and watch video EVIDENCE:



28 October 2024 by 🕯️🗽 Maureen Clare Murphy Rights and Accountability

Uneasy equilibrium after Israel strikes Iran
« Last Edit: October 28, 2024, 04:33:34 pm by AGelbert »
So in everything, do to others what you would have them do to you, for this sums up the Law and the Prophets. Matthew 7:12

AGelbert

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28 October 2024 by🕯️🗽 Bashaer Muammar The Electronic Intifada

“Dahrak, Dahrak”: Navigating war-torn 🥵 Gaza’s 😖 broken roads

Movement itself has become a form of resistance. Here, a donkey cart transports people in Deir al-Balah on 30 June 2024. Omar AshtawyAPA images

SNIPPET:

One day in September my husband and I were traveling down Gaza’s beach road.

To my left, the vast expanse of the Mediterranean Sea unfolded with its unspoken promise of freedom and peace.

To my right was a war-torn city.

My husband, Amir, and I clung to the sides of a donkey cart, the only available means of transportation, as we attempted to escape the suffocating chaos.

The road was a battlefield of its own – cra-cked, cratered and crowded with desperate souls. The sound of bombs echoed in the distance, a constant reminder that nowhere was safe.

Suddenly, the sharp screech of brakes and the sickening crunch of metal against wood jolted us from our thoughts.

A car had slammed into our cart, and in that split second, Amir’s quick thinking saved our lives. He threw his legs over the front of the cart, absorbing the impact, but leaving his legs bruised.

No protection

The war has left us with few transport options. The ones we have are fraught with danger. Donkey carts, once used for carrying goods, have become common, now carrying people trying to move from one place to another.

These carts offer no protection. They are open on all sides. I remember navigating through Al Attar Street in Al-Mawasi, where the crowd was so dense that we had to inch forward, barely moving.

Drivers shouted Dahrak, Dahrak, “your back,” a warning for passers-by to be careful as the carts squeezed through the throng of people.

The street was a chaotic mix of donkey carts, a few cars, bicycles and even a truck carrying displaced families.

The danger was everywhere – not just from the war, but from the desperate measures we were forced to take to survive. The once simple act of crossing the street had become a high-stakes .

Full article:
https://electronicintifada.net/content/dahrak-dahrak-navigating-war-torn-gazas-broken-roads/49591


Anthony G. Gelbert > Ben_H Oct 25
It's the Social Darwinism.

Social Darwinists believe that ethics based principles are 'limitations pretending to be virtues'. To them, ethics are 'feel good illusions' that humans invented to pretend our species has empathy. To Social Darwinists, empathy is irrefutable evidence of inexcusable weakness. To them, all who are guided by ethics are deluded fools that should be eliminated from the human 'apex predator' gene pool for the "good" of our species.

The ideology of the Social Darwinist is indistinguishable from the despicable ideology of NAZI Germany, clearly exemplified in their brutally enforced morally bankrupt concentration camp law: “Eat your own bread, and if you can, that of your neighbor.”

Social Darwinism is the morally bankrupt world view that spawned the profit over people and planet neoliberal ideology. Neoliberal intellectuals like Friedrich von Hayek, Ludwig von Mises and Milton Friedman were all Social Darwinists long before they renamed laissez-faire liberalism (that had been thoroughly discredited by the Great Depression) with the catchy title of "Neoliberalism".

Zionism , both here in the U.S. and Israel, is also full throated Social Darwinism in practice. The only, purely cosmetic, difference between Neoliberalism and Zionism is that Zionism has sanctimonious pseudo-religious camouflage.

Celebrated social theorist and geographer David Harvey explains that neoliberal ideology serves the following principle:

"There shall be no serious challenge to the absolute power of money to rule absolutely. And that power is to be exercised with one objective: Those possessed of money shall not only be privileged to accumulate wealth endlessly at will, but they shall have the right to inherit the earth, taking either direct or indirect dominion, not only of the land and all the resources and productive capacities that reside therein, but also assume absolute command, directly or indirectly, over the labor and creative capacities of all those others it needs. The rest of humanity shall be deemed disposable."

If the morally bankrupt, socially destructive ideology which champions the absolute power of money to rule absolutely, while it simultaneously deems the rest of humanity disposable, is not SOCIAL DARWINISM, I don't know what is.
https://soberthinking.createaforum.com/geopolitics/war-provocations-and-peace-actions/msg2511/#msg2511
ALSO:
https://soberthinking.createaforum.com/geopolitics/war-provocations-and-peace-actions/msg2512/#msg2512
« Last Edit: October 28, 2024, 06:52:21 pm by AGelbert »
So in everything, do to others what you would have them do to you, for this sums up the Law and the Prophets. Matthew 7:12

AGelbert

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Unprecedented Zionist Defeats Unravel on 👉 All Fronts!
« Reply #677 on: October 29, 2024, 11:39:23 am »
🦉 Col. Jacques Baud | Israel Facing Total Collapse? Unprecedented Defeats Unravel on 👉 All Fronts!


Dialogue Works 214K subscribers Oct 28, 2024

Jacques Baud is a former member of Swiss strategic intelligence, a specialist in Eastern European countries and head of United Nations 🕊 peace operations doctrine. He was engaged in negotiations with top Russian military and intelligence officials right after the fall of the USSR. Within NATO, he participated in programs in Ukraine and in particular during the Maidan revolution in 2014.
Baud's Books: https://www.amazon.com.br/stores/author/B001K7ETPE

AGelbert COMMENT:
ZIONIST Heretical Judaism Ideology is best understood as morally bankrupt Social Darwinism. Zionists, exactly like the Pseudo-christians here in the USA (all "Gott" Mins Uns full throated supporters of Zionist murder and mayhem) are about as Torah = Bible Pentateuch "based" as socially destructive Social Darwinism is "based" on socially constructive Altruism. IOW, the Zionist Ideology is Orwellian to the CORE!

Zionism is an Orwellian perversion of Judaism. Zionists "justify" their land grabs by sanctimoniously quoting the Torah on all the promises of land God made to Moses, the boundaries of which were specifically stated in the Book of Numbers.

Anyone that REALLY is a Christian, or a Torah believing Jew for that matter, knows the land claims are spurious, and have not been valid since LONG before Christ showed up.

Of course, the inconvenient parts of Scripture do not stop the Hasbara Propaganda spouting Zionists from "justifying" their PLAN to grab HUGE parts of Syria, Jordan, Lebanon AND a big chunk of Egypt too (SEE: Book of Numbers Chapter 34:1-15 for details)!

AND, if anybody is naïve enough to think Netanyahu and his band of ZIO-NAZIs will be "appeased" AFTER they slaughter millions of people in Palestine AND the above listed countries because "God" promised them that land, you do not understand how those morally bankrupt Zionism = Social Darwinism = Lebensraum think.

Netanyahu and his band of RAPACIOUS HELLSPAWN MUST BE STOPPED NOW!

MESSAGE to anyone that claims Christians should support Israel's "Promised Land" claims:
As far as eternity is concerned, ownership of all the land you conquered through deceit, cruelty and murder is worthless. A moving van never follows a hearse.


« Last Edit: October 29, 2024, 11:41:23 am by AGelbert »
So in everything, do to others what you would have them do to you, for this sums up the Law and the Prophets. Matthew 7:12

AGelbert

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ISRAELI STRIKE ON IRAN THWARTED? 🤷‍♂️
« Reply #678 on: October 29, 2024, 06:10:44 pm »
MIDDLE EAST IN DEPTH WITH 🕯️🗽 LAITH MAROUF - EPISODE 30 - ISRAELI STRIKE ON IRAN THWARTED?


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Dialogue Works

October 29, 2024

🕯️🗽 Col. Larry Wilkerson: Is This the End? Israel Facing Defeat on Every Front!

🕯️🗽 Scott Ritter: Israel's Attack Crumbles! Iran & Hezbollah's Powerful Defense Leaves Israel Powerless!

🕯️ Judging 🗽 Freedom

October 29, 2024

🕯️🦅 COL. Douglas Macgregor: Is Israel In Retreat? 🤔

« Last Edit: October 29, 2024, 08:26:47 pm by AGelbert »
So in everything, do to others what you would have them do to you, for this sums up the Law and the Prophets. Matthew 7:12

AGelbert

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THE INTEL DROP

October 29, 2024 By 🕯️🗽 Syed Zafar Mehdi

Why Netanyahu Won’t Admit Over 5800 Jewish Terrorists Have Died while Committing Genocide

SNIPPETS:

A journalist who spoke to eyewitnesses there told me that the Nevatim Airbase, which has served as a launch point for deadly air operations against Gaza and more recently Lebanon and is located deep inside the Negev desert, said dozens of missiles landed inside the base, inflicting heavy damage.

The attack brought the base to a grinding halt and resulted in scores of military fatalities. The regime, however, refused to publicly acknowledge it.

He also referred to the missiles that landed in Tel Aviv, near the Mossad headquarters, which destroyed a good part of the city block, resulting in both human and collateral losses. Again it wasn’t made public.

“Cars were entirely destroyed, debris covered everything in a 200-foot radius and the missile crater — which was at least 50 feet wide, was filled in and covered with dirt almost immediately by Israeli authorities, which underscores how embarrassing this was for Israel which boasts often about the efficiency of its billion-dollar missile defense systems,” the journalist told me.

Just weeks later, on October 18, the Lebanese Hezbollah resistance movement delivered a less subtle but strong message, this time with a drone dining-room delivery, straight to the Golani Brigade’s reconnaissance unit in the occupied city of Haifa.

Israeli media initially hesitated, before begrudgingly confirming five soldier deaths. However, as sources under the cloak of anonymity later revealed, the real number was much higher, buried under layers of secrecy and silence that have come to characterize the Zionist military’s standard operating procedure.

Recent ground battles between the Israeli military and Hezbollah resistance fighters in southern Lebanon have evidently driven Israeli forces to the breaking point, with eyewitness accounts suggesting Israeli fatalities in the hundreds, as well as destruction of Merkava tanks, military bulldozers, armored vehicles, troop carriers as well as Hermes 450 drones.

The regime in Tel Aviv, however, trickles out only a fraction of these grim numbers, counting soldiers in “tens” instead of hundreds to soften the blow to the morale of settlers who continue to live in fear. ... ...

In Iran, Palestine, and Lebanon, martyrs inspire generations to carry on their legacy. Sayyed Abbas Mousavi’s torch was carried forward by Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah and Sheikh Yassin’s legacy was preserved by Ismail Haniyeh and Yahya Sinwar. The movement grows and the ideology strengthens.

On the other hand, slain Israeli troops or settlers rarely receive public tributes. They are statistics rather than symbols. Since October 7, large numbers of settlers have fled the occupied territories, with the regime frantically slapping travel bans to curb the exodus.

Conscription is forced upon settlers unwillingly, with trauma and despair spreading like a second wave. If these settlers or mercenary troops had their way, they would book the next flight out of Tel Aviv. They know they don’t belong to the occupied land. They know it more today than ever before.

So Netanyahu understands that the disclosure of military fatalities would further demoralize a settler populace already plagued by fear and anxiety. The freeze on casualty reporting is a calculated move, a gambit to avoid a mass awakening to the occupation’s mounting costs.

Many Israeli soldiers and settlers perished on October 7 at the hands of the occupation military under the Hannibal Directive. Today, nobody knows them. They have been turned into cold statistics, wasted for an illegitimate entity with a shaky foundation increasingly staring at its annihilation.

Full Article:
https://www.theinteldrop.org/2024/10/30/why-netanyahu-wont-admit-over-5800-jewish-terrorists-have-died-while-committing-genocide/
« Last Edit: October 30, 2024, 03:00:44 pm by AGelbert »
So in everything, do to others what you would have them do to you, for this sums up the Law and the Prophets. Matthew 7:12

AGelbert

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Israel and Its Neighborhood, An Interview with Ambassador Chas Freeman
« Reply #680 on: October 30, 2024, 05:20:10 pm »

October 28, 2024 by 🕯️🗽 Patrick Lawrence

Israel and Its Neighborhood, An Interview with Ambassador Chas Freeman

SNIPPET:

PL: A German newspaper recently published an interview with the Egyptian foreign minister, Sameh Shoukry, who expressed his profound frustration with the Americans as Israel continues its assault in Gaza—and now the West Bank and Lebanon. You can’t work with the Americans, he complained in so many words. They say one thing, they rarely mean it, and typically do something else altogether.

It prompts my first question. In the context of the enlarging crisis in West Asia, please comment on the diplomatic positions America’s allies in the region. What, generally, is going through their minds? Why haven’t they reacted more vigorously to the Israeli assault? Are they simply “bought,” in one or another way? Or is there more to it?

CF: The United States no longer has any “diplomatic allies” in the region. Popular anger at American support for the Israeli effort to ☠️ rid Palestine of its Arab population and expand into Gaza and Lebanon makes alignment with Washington too politically costly for Arab rulers to risk.

Israel’s depravity has ended any prospect of normalized relations by Arab states with it. Those that have normalized relations with Israel are now under popular pressure to suspend or reverse it. More importantly, the Gulf Arabs have declared that they will be neutral in any conflict between Iran, Israel, and the United States. Israel’s genocide in Gaza has created a state of war between it and Yemen and fostered a rapprochement between previously estranged Egypt and Turkey.

Full article:
https://www.unz.com/article/israel-and-its-neighborhood-an-interview-with-ambassador-chas-freeman/
« Last Edit: October 30, 2024, 05:32:17 pm by AGelbert »
So in everything, do to others what you would have them do to you, for this sums up the Law and the Prophets. Matthew 7:12

AGelbert

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Genocide as Colonial Erasure
« Reply #681 on: October 30, 2024, 05:43:07 pm »


Oct 29, 2024

Genocide as Colonial Erasure

(w/ 🕯️🗽🕊️ Francesca Albanese)


Transcript
Chris Hedges 

The latest United Nations report by Francesca Albanese, the Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the Palestinian territories occupied since 1967, argues that the violence unleashed against the Palestinians after October 7 is not happening in a vacuum, but is part of a long-term intentional, systematic, State-organized forced displacement and replacement of the Palestinians. The report details how the ongoing genocide against the Palestinian is accelerating, in large part because of the complicity and indifference of the international community. The report, released Monday, argues that, if not halted, the mass slaughter and displacement in Gaza of its 2.3 million residents, tactics increasingly being replicated in the occupied West Bank, jeopardizes the very existence of the Palestinian people in Palestine. It concludes with an urgent appeal to Member States in the United Nations to intervene before Palestinians, especially those in northern Gaza, which Israel appears intent on fully depopulating and annexing, are driven from their homeland. This intervention must, the report states, include a full arms embargo and sanctions against Israel until the mass killing of Palestinians is halted, a permanent ceasefire is in place and Israeli occupation forces and Jewish colonists withdraw from occupied Gaza and the West Bank, including East Jerusalem. Absent this, the report recommends that Israel be formally recognized as an apartheid state and persistent violator of international law, reactivating the UN Special Committee Against Apartheid to address the situation in Palestine and potentially suspend Israel’s membership in the United Nations. Joining me to discuss her report is Francesca Albanese.

Francesca, the report is devastating, as is, of course, every daily report out of Gaza and the West Bank, you do a lot of research out of the West Bank as well. I want to begin with kind of the broader implications of Israel's genocide, which is at the conclusion of your report, before we go into the specifics, which is at the front of your report, you note in the report that since your last report, and despite the International Court of Justice interventions, genocidal acts have, in your words, proliferated. Nearly a year of scorched earth assault has led to the calculated destruction of Gaza. The human material and environmental cost is unquantifiable. In essence, what you're saying is that as horrible as things were, it is steadily getting worse and worse for the Palestinians. So let's talk a little bit about the trajectory. You were one of the first  official investigators, and of course, we should be clear, you're banned from working in the occupied territories by the Israeli government, but I believe you were one of the first to raise the issue of genocide, which is now, of course, not disputable, but let's talk a little bit about, globally, the trajectory over the last, now it's more than a year, what's been happening?

Francesca Albanese 

Thank you, Chris, yeah, as it often happens, genocide is not an act. It's a process. It's a very complex crime to identify. But it has a collective dimension and it builds on. It's made of criminal acts. But what keeps everything together is the intent to destroy through this criminal act, a group in whole or in part. And this is what we have seen happening in Gaza as of the beginning of October. As I've said it's October 9, where things became undeniably genocidal, where there was a genocidal intent expressed. The word "Amalek," in my view, is the most telling of all, because Amalek is a biblical term that has been evoked primarily by Netanyahu, but then by others. And by the soldiers who have been acting as willful executioners of that plan, that call Amalek, which in the Bible is go and destroy the Amalek, the mother, the suckling, the donkey, the camel, everything. And this is what has been happening in Gaza, the acts of killing, the mass killing, the infliction of psychological and physical torture, the devastation, the creation of conditions of life that would not allow the people in Gaza to live, from the destruction of hospitals, the mass force displacement and the mass homelessness while people were being bombed daily, and the starvation. How can we read these acts in isolation? We need to take a step back, look at the whole and see what has [been] happening as there is no other reasonable inference that can be, that can be drawn, even without looking at the intent, as expressed by the use of the word Amalek, which is like chop the tall trees in in Rwanda, this is the term that has marked this genocide.

Chris Hedges 

So Francesca, you make the point that in order to categorize what's happening as genocide, there are innumerable factors, mass killing, extermination, or an act of extermination, in and of itself, doesn't necessarily constitute genocide. You write in the report that the destruction of Gaza has raised allegations of what you call domicide, herbicide, scholasticide, meticide, cultural genocide and ecocide, and then you note, nearly 40 million tons of debris, including unexploded ordnance and human remains, contaminate the ecosystem. Over 140 waste sites and 340,000 tons of waste, untreated wastewater and sewage overflow contribute to the spread of diseases such as hepatitis A, respiratory infections, diarrhea and skin diseases. As Israeli leaders promised, Gaza has been made unfit for human life. So all of these, we're going to talk about in detail. You document what's happening in detail, but just talk about the complete eradication that raises what's happening to the Palestinians to the level of genocide.

Francesca Albanese 

Absolutely, in fact, what constitutes genocide is a specific number of criminal acts, like I mentioned, acts of killing members of the group, when the group is identified through four main criterias: ethnical, racial, national or religious and the group is targeted as such, this is the critical element. And then there are, as I was saying, acts of killing, infliction of severe bodily or mental harm, the creation of conditions of life that will lead to the destruction of the group. And then there are other two crimes that I'm not saying are not present or have not occurred in Gaza; simply, I've not had the elements to investigate that, although one regrettably so, the prevention of birth, I do think that this is an area that urges ad hoc investigation, because the way Israel has steadily, even before October 2023, targeted children is revealing of an animus or a mindset to target the Palestinians from the very, very early age. And this is demonstrated by the numbers of children arrested and detained, brutalized, tormented, tortured in some instances, although the threshold for torture for children is lower than for adults. And the killings, the extrajudicial killings of children hit in the head and torso, these are elements that have always been there, Chris. How come we have not seen it? We have not seen what was happening, the trajectory we were describing before. But again, what is relevant in order to establish that there is genocide, is not just the  intent, behind these crimes, enunciated at Article Two of the Genocide Convention, is the overall intent, specific intent, to destroy the people, the group as a whole, or in part as such. And what is the group here? It's the Palestinians as such, the Amalek, the monsters, the human animals. This derogatory language, this dehumanizing language, has prepared the spirit of those who have ordered planned and executed the genocide. And look, it's not an easy task to establish genocidal intent, although, as I already wrote in my first report, it's impossible to deny it when it's so ostentatious as in the evidence of it is so ostentatious as in the case of Gaza. But there are three elements that I write about in the in the report, even when the direct evidence of intent, like a plan in which Israeli leaders have written, yes, we want to genocide the Palestinians. Let this aside. I do believe that there is a direct intent, but let's assume that there is not. When direct intent is unavailable, then intent should be, or must be, drawn from inference, and only reasonable inference says that the jurisprudence. But we have to consider these elements, that while recognizing the possible composite nature of genocide, the fact that one war crime or one crime against humanity might also constitute an act of genocide, and this is pretty obvious. I mean, often genocides have happened in the context of civil strife, like it was in former Yugoslavia, but even the genocide of the Jewish people and Romani Sinti, in a way, happen in the context of war. However, the compartmentalization of the conduct into desperate acts without capturing the broader context, is extremely dangerous. It's nonsensical. You cannot look for the genocidal intent with a magnifier. You need to take a step back and look at the overall, what I say, totality of the conduct, all the acts, the scale and nature of them, the knowledge of what these acts would have resulted into, in the totality of the territory against the totality of the people. And again, doing otherwise, and we can elaborate on that, but doing otherwise would verify that clear obligation in the Genocide Convention to prevent, to prevent genocide when intent manifests itself. When the word "Amalek" was used that was already a sign, it was not captured. But then, on the 26th of January, International Court of Justice identified the plausibility of risk for the rights protected under the Genocide Convention for the Palestinian people, the plausibility that acts of genocide were being committed. So why was it not stopped then and, as of then, the acts have continued, have multiplied and you know what Chris? My report only covers facts until September 2024, but just in the last three, four weeks, the crimes that have been committed against the Palestinians, the burning people alive, the bombing camps, refugee camps, and schools and UNRWA premises. And going home by home in northern Gaza, while the population is continuously exposed to the threat of starvation. What can it be? What can it be? So again, Israel continues to commit acts of genocide in Gaza, and the risk of this metastasizing to other parts of the Occupied Palestinian Territory is very real.

Chris Hedges 

Well you make that point, and you spend time talking about the conditions in the West Bank, which are, of course, becoming worse and worse. I was in the West Bank in July. You raised a very important point, that none of it is new. What's new is the scale. So in 2000, the cartoonist Joe Sacco, who wrote "Palestine" and "Footnotes in Gaza" and I took my vacation time to do it from the New York Times, went to Khan Yunis and wrote what we called "A Gaza Diary" for Harper's Magazine. And just wrote, day by day, what life was like. The settlers were still there at Netzarim. And while we were in the camp, I speak Arabic, I heard through the loudspeakers, "taeal, taeal" which means come, come. As the kids, the young boys, 10, 11, 12 were coming out of school, on their way home from school, and then the Israelis began, through the loudspeakers on their jeeps, using curse words, even [inaudible] and these horrible terms, the kids naturally picked up rocks and they shot them. They were like mice enticed into a trap. That article—and we had their names, the times they were shot, I mean, it was incontrovertible—led to my being told by the newspaper that I would no longer cover the Middle East. I would no longer be allowed to report out of the Middle East. So what we're talking about is scale, and I think you capture that in the intent has always been there, but the scale is unlike anything we have seen. I think you even argue greater than the Nakba. That's the first point I wanted to make. The second point when you talk about dehumanization and Amalek, that's what I saw in Bosnia, where the Serbs referred to all the Bosniaks as Ustaše. And to be fair, a lot of the Bosniaks referred to the Serbs as Chetniks. These are World War II terms, when the Ustaše were allied with the Nazis, and the Chetniks were Serbian nationalists who were fighting the Ustaše, separate from Tito's partisans. So I want to ask you about that, because essentially, these historical terms are used, and of course, the Israelis have referred to—is also in your report— referred to the Palestinians as Nazis, but, they historicize it. And I just want to ask you about that. That was true in Bosnia and that's true in the apartheid state of Israel.

Francesca Albanese 

Yeah, look, just for the sake of clarity regarding intent, and sorry to be the picky lawyer, but what I do say that has always been there is the potential to commit the genocide. Because the Greater Israel plan, that has always been there, making the whole land of Palestine a land for the Jewish people only had an eliminatory component for the Palestinians, because, as I write in the report, and I think this will resonate very strongly with all indigenous people, for the indigenous people, the land is not a place where they live, it's who they are. It's part of the identity and this continuous uprooting of the Palestinians en masse in big events in 1947, '49, in 1967 and now as of 2023, these are instances where Israel seizes the opportunity to forcibly displace the Palestinians using very destructive means. But never the violence has been so acute and in a way, intentionally, deliberately eliminatory, as in this case. So it's like the genocidal intent has been dormant in the veins of the system, but then the opportunity, the capacity, the circumstances that developed after October 7 have been such to prompt this genocide. And you know, while there have been these massive instances of forced displacement, forced displacement is [inaudible] genocide, but again, it might be part of a genocidal conduct. Palestinians have been uprooted all the time, even  individuals after individuals, family after family, and Israel has tried to take as much land as possible, inch by inch, home by home, dune by dune. And again, this is why in the report I describe that in this case, genocide is a means to an end. The end is the realization of Greater Israel. They openly talk about removing the Palestinians from Palestine. They can go to Jordan. They can go to Egypt. There are over 20 Muslim countries. This is so racist. How can we even entertain such an argument without really stopping it and blaming those who use it, accusing those who use it of racism? But so, yeah, it has always been there, and things have escalated at the time Israel found that they were ready, but then they did it. Yeah, I think it's been quite deliberate, certainly Netanyahu's mindset and the way they have presented and projected the Palestinians throughout the whole history of Israel, Nurit Peled, whom I often quote, talks of the quote, unquote, Nazification of the Palestinians. So yes, there is this dehistoricization of the Holocaust. The Palestinians are blamed for the Holocaust. They're called Nazis. But also look at the language that Israeli leaders, military, political and religious leaders have used after October 7: We are fighting for the civilization, for Western civilization, against the barbarians. We are the light. We are the people of light, and these are the people of darkness. This language is not new. This is been used over and over in other settler colonial contexts and genocide in order to justify the crimes, the counter insurgency, the counter-terrorism, or the self-defense against these monsters. So this is the reality of how I see it.

Chris Hedges 

You write that jurisprudence had broadly focused on determining intent through what you call acts of targeting the very foundation of the group, including the imposition of living conditions leading to what you call slow death and the destruction of the spirit, of the will to live and of life itself. In other words, intent to destroy is assessed holistically and in totality. I want to ask about journalists. It's not in your report, although I know you have spoken out about Israel's attack on journalists and they just condemned I think it's six reporters for Al Jazeera, Palestinian reporters for Al Jazeera who are some of the last. The Committee to Protect Journalists is talking about 128 killings of journalists in Lebanon, West Bank and Israel. I think the Palestinian figures are higher, 177. I was a war correspondent, it's unlike anything I saw in El Salvador, I think we lost 22 journalists. Or Sarajevo was, again, a few dozen. This assault on journalism is unprecedented. And just before we go on, I know you've spoken about it. I want you to... because, as you said, by condemning these Al Jazeera reporters as members of Hamas, you've essentially delivered them a death sentence.

Francesca Albanese 

Absolutely. You see, there is this concept that everyone labeled or qualified as a terrorist by Israel deserves to die. But this is so dehumanizing, not only because, again, it builds on a racist presumption of guilt on side of Palestinians. The Palestinians are so naturally terrorist that it almost goes unquestioned when Israel says, Oh, these, are Hamas affiliates or terrorists themselves. But also, where is the presumption of innocence? Where is the principle that everyone, including alleged criminals, alleged perpetrators, are entitled to justice. You see, all these has been eroded, erased by Israel, which has transformed, I often say, in a world without civilians. It's the light against the dark, it's good people against evil. And this is how Israel is justifying the mass killing of the Palestinians, the destruction of what remains of Palestine its people. You know, this is not just the conflict during which most journalists have been killed. This is also the conflict in which the highest number of UN officials have been killed, the highest number of UN premises have been targeted, the highest number of hospitals have been targeted. All universities have been destroyed, and never a population has gone starving so fast. Never has such a high number of people have starved at such a speed. This has been concluded by the Special Rapporteur on the Right to Food. And the Commission of Inquiry in June this year, said, never a population or never a people, a number of people of disproportion, has been displaced at such a speed before. And sorry, no, sorry, I need to, I need to rephrase. This is not what they say. They say that this has been one of the fastest forced displacement of history meaning the people from northern Gaza into southern Gaza, while both the north and south were being bombed in the early months of the genocide last year. And the media. You know, it's interesting, I was rereading [Albert] Camus recently, and I found this quote, which is very telling. It says that the journalists are the historian of the instant, and as such, they should look at the facts, report on the facts. Of course, they can analyze at their own interpretation, but they need to report on the facts in their nudity, as they appear. And this has not been done. It's not uncommon that in the context of a genocide, the media contribute to play a critical and criminal role. This has been ascertained by international tribunals in the case of former Yugoslavia, in the case of Rwanda. But what is unique here is that this is not just the Israeli media who have amplified genocidal statements, genocidal calls, which have provided a platform to rapists, Israeli soldiers who had **** Palestinians, to go and show and rant about their right to **** Palestinians. It's not just that, and there have been critical voices among Israeli journalists. I mean, 972 does incredible work. Haaretz as well, has very good journalists, and they are honest about what's happening. In the West, the mainstream media has replicated and amplified the lies we have heard. And I said, sometimes I look at politicians and journalists who have repeated lies, the story of the beheaded babies, the Israeli babies from October 7 is not true. Does it take away the crimes that Hamas and other Palestinian armed groups have indeed committed against Israeli civilians, killing or brutalizing or taking them hostages? Of course not. But what's the need to talk about mass ****? There is no evidence of ****, which doesn't mean that **** didn't occur, but there is no evidence. So why people, Western leaders, talk of these videos, of these pictures. President Biden said that he had seen the picture of the beheaded babies, and what did he see? I'm not saying they didn't see, that he invented it, but again, where is the evidence and why [inaudible] there are countries like my own country in Italy, where they are continuing to relaunch these lies. Why? Why has Western media been so complicit with the genocidal mindset? Why it has covered up and why it has further dehumanized the Palestinians? And here, I think we are finally put in our... as really as [inaudible] in front of a mirror as a society, this is who we are: extremely racist toward the Palestinians. This is not something unique to the Palestinians. I think that people in the Global South are generally perceived as less worthy by some people in the West?

Chris Hedges 

I mean, it fits the racialized stereotype, which is not challenged by the dominant society. So I want to ask, before we get into the specifics in your report, you write, perpetrators of genocide almost always allege their actions were taken pursuant to an ongoing military conflict. Yet genocide may be a means for achieving military objectives just as readily as military conflict may be a means for instigating a genocidal plan. And then you write genocidal intent may exist simultaneously with other ulterior motives. One of the mantras, certainly within the US press, the US media landscape, is Israel's right to defend itself. Israel's right to defend itself. As if that precludes the possibility of genocide, and you make that distinction in your report, that it doesn't.

Francesca Albanese 

Yeah, there are three layers that need to be understood here. The first is that even when a state has the right to defend itself from an attack or a serious threat of an attack, it cannot commit genocide. And the fact that the court, the International Court of Justice, the supreme organ of the United Nations, had already identified this possibility, this likelihood, should have put Israel on notice. [It] did put Israel on notice, and should have been an alarm for the entire international community, which should have not acted business as usual as of them, and instead, this has not happened. But also, I say in the report, people tend to confuse motives with intent. The intent is the determination, it's when an individual, or here, I mean in the report, I'm talking of state responsibility, because this is critical, and I would be very happy to to unpack that later, but it's the determination to destroy a group in all or in part, and the masterminds behind it might have the most desperate sorry, might have different motives. Might want to do that to stay in power. Might want to do that because this is seen as a way to liberate the hostages, or might want to do that because they feel entitled to eradicate a political entity or its armed wing. But motives are irrelevant in international criminal law. In the case of genocide, we need to look at the intent, what eventually has manifested, like mens rea, like the mind that want to destroy it. This is why we need to be very, very clear, because I hear people saying no, but Israel doesn't want to commit to genocide, they want to liberate the hostages as if it was another intent that could be inferred? No, no, it's not. First of all, as you know, from the report, as you have read it, I debunk both the argument that it was even a motive, the liberation of the hostages. This is a mantra or a refrain that has helped Israel continue to fan the flames of attack against Gaza. So I debunk that and debunk the argument of eradicating Hamas. But let's spend a word on self-defense because, as you rightly point out, and it's shocking for me to see that, but member states continue to talk about the right of self-defense as if it was an existential... as if Israel was facing an existential threat that legitimated like wholesome war against another people. There is no self-defense that Israel can invoke against the people it maintains under occupation because, look, the only context in which a state can invoke self-defense is when it's attacked by another state or the use of force is authorized by the Security Council. There is no Security Council resolution authorizing Israel to wage a war. But why so? Because Israel cannot wage a war against the population it maintains under occupation, because this population has the right to resist an unlawful occupation. Now, when I say that, I infuriate many because they say, Oh, you see, she's justifying violence. No, I'm just saying what international law says, because, again, the states have the right to defend themselves, and so have the people, especially people whose right of self-determination has not yet materialized, and therefore there would be a conflict within international law itself if self-defense took precedence over the right of self-determination. The only way for Israel to protect itself, which is its sacrosanct right, is to withdraw from what remains of historical Palestine. Withdraw the occupation, withdraw the settlements, withdraw its exploitation of Palestinians resources, as it has been ordered by the International Court of Justice in July this year, and then stop practicing apartheid against the Palestinians, including those with Israeli citizenship.

Chris Hedges 

You talk about one of the tactics being the humiliation and degradation of Palestinians. You write, prisoners stripped and  sadistically tortured en masse, bodies of adults and children piled up and decomposing in the street, survivors forced to eat animal food and grass and drink sea water or even sewage, the maiming of thousands, including young children left limbless before they could even crawl, the destruction of homes and violation of intimate life, having absolutely nothing to return to, mass graves and the exhumation and relocation of bodies are specific desecrating acts, which themselves can suggest genocidal intent, combined, these acts go far beyond what international jurisprudence recognize as steps in the process of destruction of the group. And then you add the pain and loss will impact generations to come.

Francesca Albanese 

Yes, absolutely.

Chris Hedges 

I mean that issue of trauma, and it's just sustained trauma. When I covered Sarajevo, we lasted as functional journalists about three weeks, and then we had to get out and recover before we came back in. The Palestinians can't get out. I can't even begin to imagine and especially the effects on children. What, week after week, month after month, this is doing, I mean, it's almost inconceivable in terms of the trauma that they're enduring.

Francesca Albanese 

Yeah. But look, I don't mind to say that this genocide has affected everyone who was looking at it from near and far. Of course, nothing can compare to the Palestinians who have experienced it firsthand, the survivors, or the Palestinians who have watched it broadcast from afar, the Palestinians in exile. Because I think it's a very effective image that of a people as a body. You chop a limb in a body, the entire body suffers. And so for people who have been really victimized for 75 years, and for whom the Nakba, the catastrophe, has never ended. This is not an instance of the past, it has been continuous, ongoing. How much they have suffered, it's undescribable, because it's true, the Palestinians are killed, they are blamed and they're smeared. This poses a question to all of us as societies that have let it happen. Because, Chris, I mean, here we cannot play with words. Those who didn't do anything to prevent this from happening, where either the monsters committed it or the monsters who enabled it. And again, there is something... It's, again, looking at the violence that has been unleashed under our watch against the Palestinians, I don't think that we can, again, I often refer to this as a monstrosity, but also the bureaucrats who have justified it. What have we become as a society? What have we become? Watching the killing, the butchering of 17,000 children. Again, I think something inside me broke at some point this year. I thought I've become desensitized, but I've not. I'm not clearly. I mean, as I hear you, reading parts of the report, I think, oh, my god, yeah, I mean, tears come to my eyes, and I'm the one who wrote that report. Look, we have forced the Palestinians to... we have abandoned the Palestinians in an inferno that was a charge before told. And yeah, Palestinians will bear the scars, will carry the scars, will carry the scars of this, and will carry the shame. This should have not happened, especially because of what the West is, how it has affirmed itself internationally for its soft power and its cradle in human rights and in an international law based order, we have lost our credibility. But we shouldn't have let it happen, especially because we failed to prevent and the genocide in Rwanda, in Bosnia and Herzegovina. And more than anything else, we are the ones who have perpetrated genocides against colonial people and even against our own people because the Jewish people who were killed, were exterminated, were genocided  during the Holocaust, were our people. So again, this shows us that we have not improved at all from where we were 80, 90 years ago, and all the more now we have let it happen with an international legal framework, which was perfectly fine to identify and stop it.

Chris Hedges 

Well, I think of all of the Holocaust studies programs which exist in almost every university, and I watch what's happening in Gaza, and my only conclusion is that they've learned nothing.

Francesca Albanese 

Yeah, I agree with you. But you know, Chris, I realized this this year, there is such a disconnect among people, including my generation. I mean, I grew up... this is why I mean, now it pained me a lot when they started accusing me of antisemitism. It's something so revolting. Antisemitism is revolting, and so be accused of antisemitism makes no sense whatsoever for who I am, but especially because I grew up with this profound immersion in what the Holocaust had been. Because this was part of my upbringing, from school, but also from my family. I mean, I grew up in a family who educated me to basic values. And the thing is that I realized that we have confused the whole or we have reduced the Holocaust to the experience of the concentration camps or the concentration comes, but, in fact, the Holocaust, it was a culmination of it. The genocide was a culmination of a process that had started with the normalization of the demonization of the Jewish people. The fact that they could be kicked out of professions and their homes and every space that had they had called life simply because  they were Jewish. And we, if we don't understand the racial element that characterized, the racial discrimination that characterized what we have done to the Jewish people, we cannot understand what is still to be addressed and to be eradicated in our societies, which is racism, it's still there.

Chris Hedges 

Well also, as Primo Levi pointed out that the real evil is not external, it's within us. We can all, as as Levi writes, become Chaim Rumkowski, the Jewish head of the Łódź ghetto, who worked in service with the Nazis. I want to get into some of the specifics, because you lay it out and it is hard to read. It's just devastating, but I think people need to hear. It. Let's begin with Gaza. You write, in recent months, 83% of food aid was prevented from entering Gaza and the civilian police in Rafah were repeatedly targeted in pairing distribution. By repeatedly targeted, let's be clear, they were shot by the Israelis. At least 34 deaths from malnutrition were recorded by 14 September 2024. At the time of writing, Prime Minister Netanyahu was evaluating a plan to block all food supplies to Northern Gaza, which, of course, has come to fruition, proposed by advisor Giora Eiland, who previously endorsed introducing epidemics as a military tactic, the killing of civilian police and clan leadership providing security for food distribution, further compounded the crisis in Gaza. This is a targeted destruction of the remnants of any kind of civil administration.

Francesca Albanese 

Yes, yes. In the last months we have seen and we continue to see the destruction of any remnants of life in in Gaza, where the possibility to continue to live, to have life in Gaza. Again, I think that what I tried to do in the report, because I am very limited in terms of word count, so I could only write 10,000 words. And so I had to provide a bird's eye picture. But I I looked at patterns, at the massacres that have been committed, and food is one of the most telling stories. You can have various stories, various ways to tell this genocide, but the way food has been destroyed in Gaza. Gaza had, as you know because you have been there, farmland, which was cultivated with love and care by Gaza farmers. And it had boats to fish despite Israeli restrictions in accessing the sea, this has been destroyed. Bakeries and other areas where food could be produced have been targeted. Humanitarian aid has been denied, and when it has been approved, it has been extremely limited, and even when it entered, it was targeted, so people were meant to be starved. Then, I don't know if you remember this video that was circulated in February by the Israeli army, around the time of the flour massacre, where Palestinians were gathering to collect bags of flour and the Israeli army targeted the crowds. There was this video which was circulated that depicted, it was very interesting the way the video portrayed the Palestinians as small, black points, they look like ants, and even I felt like there is something wrong with it. It was meant to elicit a sort of disgust toward the Palestinians. It's been brutal, this has been brutal. Again, I let the dust settle and we will have the full picture of what Israel has done, and the Israelis will be shamed forever. I'm sorry. I mean, I'm concerned. I'm very concerned with Israelis as well, because I do believe that they are victims of some sort, especially... and I don't want to justify, someone who cannot justify what they have done but they've been indoctrinated for decades to see the Palestinians as the enemy, the ones who had caused their extermination. And this is a fact that the Jewish people are traumatized because they've been persecuted for centuries, and the Holocaust was the culmination of that persecution. So there is something that probably it's an intergenerational trauma that has changed the way these people function and see the world. So they are prone to see an existential threat outside for them, I don't blame them for this. I blame Israeli governments, who have, as Nurit Peled says, contributed to dehumanize the Palestinians through school programs, through media narratives, through the political discourse, and they don't see the Palestinians as human. This is why they can kill women and children and elderly persons with no spite.

Chris Hedges 

Well, Ilan Pappé wrote a book about that process of indoctrination several years ago. I want to talk about, as you do in the report, the Israeli torture camps. You write, thousands have disappeared. Many, after being detained in appalling conditions, often bound to beds, blindfolded and in diapers, deprived of medical treatment, subject to unsanitary conditions, starvation, torturous cuffing, severe beatings, electrocution and sexual assault by both humans and animals. At least 48 detainees have died in custody, and of course, as we speak, thousands, certainly hundreds, if not thousands, of Palestinians are being detained and subject to these conditions in northern Gaza, especially in Jabalia.

Francesca Albanese 

Yes, we have seen in the last hours new trucks of the Israeli army loaded with half-naked Palestinians, a scene that we had seen already earlier this year, Palestinian men of different ages. You know, when it comes to arrest and detention, which is a topic that has been very dear to me as a lawyer, as I was there in Palestine. And it was shocking to me, this the easiness that Israelis had to arrest and detain  Palestinians, but really for things that were basic instances of life. And this is why, when I became a special rapporteur, my second report was about arrest and detention. I've spoken of a mass incarceration governance. So it was already there, and it was quite prosecutorial toward the Palestinians. So arrest and detentions were used in a criminal way, as in a widespread and systematically arbitrary fashion before October. What has happened after October 2023, it's incredibly telling of the destructive intent that Israel has had. Because look, let's assume for a second that Israel had the right to conduct a war in Gaza and well, there are rules, including wars, and so people cannot be killed if they do not pose an imminent threat. If there is a suspicion of crimes, they have to be investigated and prosecuted before being deprived of their freedom. This doesn't apply to the Palestinians, but let's [inaudible] admit that Israel had the right to arrest all those who had been arrested in Gaza and have been detained in appalling, appalling conditions. But what about the Palestinians in the West Bank? What did they have to do with what happened in Gaza? This is why I say, we need to look at the totality of conduct against the totality of the people. Because there was no Hamas military commander in the West Bank fighting the Israelis. Of course, there was also armed resistance, but because there is an unlawful, protracted occupation will generate resistance. The thing is that most of the Palestinians who were being arrested and detained, including children, and put in despicable, despicable conditions, much worse than what it was already pretty horrific for [inaudible] were from the West Bank. So this is why I say, look, there is no justification. And another thing that struck me is that I started receiving reports from individuals of instances of torture and abuses, serious abuses in detention as early as January and, together with other special rapporteurs, I investigated a number of these cases, but then as of February and March, reports started to be circulated by UNRWA, and then PCATI (Public Committee Against Torture in Israel), an Israeli organization, and then B’Tselem, which unveiled the system of the torture network that that exists in Israel. And then remember one of the lawyers who had interviewed Palestinians who had been released from arrests and detention told me, I've never seen I mean, it's very humiliating for a Palestinian, like in general, there is a cultural element, to talk about ****. And this time it was no, it was different. They were really desperate to tell what they had endured, and denouncing **** as it had been used against them and others. So it has broken the taboo that you cannot talk about **** because it's been used in a widespread and systemic fashion.

Chris Hedges 

That was true in Bosnia too, Srebrenica. I want to talk about the West Bank. You talk about, you call it, the risk of genocide in the West Bank, including East Jerusalem. The devastation inflicted on Gaza is now metastasizing to the West Bank, including East Jerusalem. In December 2023, Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant predicted that when what the IDF did in Gaza becomes clear, that will be projected on Judea and Samaria, that's a settlers term for the West Bank. Between the seventh of October 2023 and September 2024, Israeli forces carried out more than 5,505 raids. Violent settlers supported by Israeli forces and officials conducted 1,084 attacks killing over 692 Palestinians, 10 times the previous 14 years. Annual average of 69 fatalities and injuring 5,199 people. The pattern of targeting children is shocking. Since the seventh of October, 169 Palestinian children have been killed, nearly 80% of whom were shot in the head or torso. This represents a 250% increase on the previous nine months, totaling more than 20% of the children killed in the West Bank since 2000. Echoing the brutality that swept Gaza, Palestinians in the West Bank have been subjected to appalling detention practices following orders by National Security Minister Ben-Gvir, a mass arrest campaign led to the detention of tens of thousands, with 9,400 currently detained. As in Gaza, many are academics, students, lawyers, journalists and human rights defenders designated as terrorists or national security threats. Leaked videos and interviews with prison officials revealed intentional and systematic abuse and brutality, degradation, torture and even ****. At least 12 detainees from the West Bank died as a result of torture and denial of medical care. I want to ask about the West Bank, because I think it's often overlooked. I was just in Ramallah and visiting my friend, the novelist Atef Abu Saif, in July, and the day before I got there, the Israelis had come in to Ramallah, which is technically part of the—I think it's now 19% of the West Bank that the Palestinians under Oslo are supposedly allowed to administer without Israeli occupation or interference—and they had come in and burned the money transfer shops, the shops by which Palestinians received money from abroad. And when I left Atef and I came in through the King Hussein Bridge in Jordan, I asked him, for those of us on the outside, what's the most important thing, other than speaking out, that we can do, materially, to help? And he said, food and clothing. So I'd like you to speak about the West Bank and what's happening, because I think it's often overlooked, and as your report makes very clear, all of the tactics that are familiar in Gaza are being accelerated on the Palestinian population in the occupied West Bank.

Francesca Albanese 

Absolutely, I think that it's important to bear in mind that while our eyes have been fixated with no result, I mean, nothing has stopped the genocide, but have been fixated on Gaza, the situation in the West Bank has deteriorated dramatically. And it's clear from the facts that I reported, that you kindly read, what has happened is that before October 7, what I thought might happen was a total collapse of the possibility of the Palestinians to live in the West Bank and therefore to explode against the occupation. I don't think that the Palestinians had the capacity to initiate another Intifada because of the matrix of control, because of the tight level of oppression over them.

Chris Hedges 

Let me just interrupt Francesca, because for people who don't understand, what Israel has done in the West Bank is encircle completely through settlements, closed military zones, special roads, all this kind of... They've encircled Palestinian enclaves, essentially cutting themselves... and when you say they can't resist the same way, unlike Gaza, which is contiguous, what they've created in the West Bank are kind of completely surrounded Bantustan, and they can choke it off. So for me to go from the King Hussein Bridge, from Jordan up to Ramallah, it should take an hour. It takes four hours because  you can't move. There's constant Israeli checkpoints. And those checkpoints, people are terrified, because they're flying checkpoints,they're not permanent, they just suddenly appear, and then people are hauled from their cars and they disappear and etc. So, when you talk about the inability of the Palestinians to build any kind of resistance, I think that's an important point.

Francesca Albanese 

Yeah and look, in my personality report on arbitrary arrest and detention, I said the overall Occupied Palestinian Territory is like a panopticon, a prison controlled from outside and from within, and it does very much the aesthetics and the features of a large prison, it's not just Gaza. So for those who have less experience than us in Palestine, the Occupied Palestinian Territory is totally fragmented. Yes, there is Gaza [which] was being isolated, but it's a contiguous area, like Chris was saying, and then the West Bank is an area fully controlled, fully controlled by the Israelis, because even in the areas, the Palestinian Authority has authority only in towns and cities. But even there, the Israelis conduct military operations and raids all the time. And outside of these areas, the Israeli army is ever present, and the settlers are the ones who control and who determine the security needs for the settlers and also the army in the areas. There are red lines that Palestinians, of course, cannot see, cannot know of, but if they're crossed, the settlers would call the army, and the army would arrest the Palestinians for simply walking on their land, land that the settlers think is theirs by divine decree. And you know this land, imagine for the Palestinians, why, the reason why, Chris, you call it bantustans, is that, yes, the Palestinians lived in these pockets of land that are separated from each other, from areas. The land controlled directly by settlers and soldiers, 400 kilometers of segregated roads, meaning roads that the Palestinians cannot even get into, and on the roads that they can use, there are more than 500 fixed checkpoints, and then hundreds of flying checkpoints. And then there is digital surveillance and gates, again, the aesthetic of the prison. And then there is also another part of control. The Israelis cannot do anything from building a house, going to a university, traveling...

Chris Hedges 

You mean the Palestinians. Palestinians cannot. You said the Israelis cannot, the Palestinians cannot.

Francesca Albanese 

Thank you. And on top of this, there is another layer of oppression and physical and mental restriction, because the Palestinians cannot do anything without the Army's authorization. They cannot build their home. They cannot get married. They cannot have a wedding or organize a vigil. They cannot open a business. They cannot travel abroad. They cannot change residents without the Army's authorization. And the Army doesn't give permits. For example, of all the building permits that Palestinians apply for, 1% is authorized. The rest is denied, which means that the Palestinians often build, for example, without permits. And this leads to demolition. Israel has demolished, until October 2023, 60,000 civilian infrastructures outside situation of conflict, meaning it doesn't account for the homes destroyed in Gaza in 2008, 2012, 2014, 2021, 2023. There had been five major wars against Gaza before October 7, so the situation was devastating. And in West Bank, it was close to explode, because since this new government coalition came on board, they have advanced the annexation of what remains of Palestinian land and annexation meaning acquiring, I mean claiming title over the land that is not yours through the use of force, which is prohibited. So Israel, with this coalition government has advanced annexation of Palestinian land and forced displacement of the Palestinians, further repression of Palestinians. 460 Palestinians had been killed in the 16 months prior to October 7. I have been a special rapporteur. 460 Palestinians and 60 Israelis. So this is why the situation was untenable, and in the West Bank is the settler colonial frontier, it's where...

Chris Hedges 

700,000 Jewish settlers in the West Bank.

Francesca Albanese 

Correct and this is something that your audience needs to think about. The reason why there is so much insecurity and so much violence in the occupied Palestinian territory, and for the Palestinians, if I had to point to one element, is the colonies. Israel has built 300 colonies, 300 settlements, [inaudible] which are illegal under international law. They constitute a war crime in and of itself, and now they are home to 300,000 settlers, Jewish Israelis, who live in occupied land. So they are part of a criminal endeavor. And therefore, you know, the situation was already worth investigation and prosecution by the International Criminal Court and others before October 7, but Israel has benefited and profited from an impunity that has intoxicated it, intoxicated its officials, and unfortunately, intoxicated its society, convincing them that they could really treat the Palestinians as disposable.

Chris Hedges 

I want to close by talking about, which is in your report, the signs of permanent annexation by Israel in both Gaza, in the West Bank, but in particularly in Gaza. You write, according to satellite imagery and other sources, Israeli soldiers have built roads and military bases in over 26% of Gaza, suggesting the aim of a permanent presence. The Israeli military expanded the buffer zone along the Gaza perimeter to 16% of the territory, flattening homes, apartment blocks and agricultural farms by August 2024. Repeated evacuation orders over approximately 84% of Gaza had corralled the majority of the population into a shrinking, unsafe humanitarian zone covering 12.6% of a territory now reconfigured in preparation for annexation. In early September, two Israeli ministers openly called for conquest and annexation of significant areas of Gaza. I mean, we're seeing it as we speak. In northern Gaza, the effort to drive the last 400,000 Palestinians in northern Gaza out through starvation and brutal attacks on densely populated areas, but you raise, in the report, the signs that they are already beginning a process of annexation in which Palestinians will not return.

Francesca Albanese 

Yeah, this is what's happening. But  as I was adding the final touches to the report, I wrote about the plan that you evoked, [inaudible] plan to reconquest Gaza. This is not new. I mean, since the very beginning, soldiers have been on record saying we are here to destroy this place and occupy and resettle. So the idea that Gaza was theirs and had to be sort of the object of a reconquista has had a phenomenal impact on the mindset of the Israelis. The point is that Gaza is home, or was home, to 2.3 million Palestinians, and they have nowhere else to go. Actually, 75% of them are not even from Gaza. This is why I hit the roof when I hear people talking about Ghazzawi because they are not Ghazzawi. 75% of them are refugees from modern day Israel and have their family properties mostly in the area of South Israel, Beersheba and, in fact, the kibbutz who have been attacked. Now, I don't think that there is this is the story of that place. So the idea that this can be resolved by kicking out the Palestinians from what remains of Palestine is brutal. But also, again, it comes to mind who, how do you say in Italian, who seeds winds, harvests storm. And this is what Israel is doing.

Chris Hedges 

Taken it from the Bible, seeds the wind, reaps the whirlwind. I want to close by asking, it's a legal point you make towards the end of your report. The ongoing genocide is doubtlessly the consequence of the exceptional status and protracted impunity that has been afforded to Israel. Israel has systematically and flagrantly violated international law, including UN Security Council resolutions, International Court of Justice orders. This has emboldened Israel's hubris and defiance of international law, as the prosecutor of the International Criminal Court has warned, if we do not demonstrate our willingness to apply the law equally, if it is seen as applied selectively, we will be creating the conditions of its complete collapse. This is the true risk we face at this perilous moment. Talk about that.

Francesca Albanese 

Yeah. I think we are already in that uncharted territory. The system  that has been built after the Second World War, has been put on a test in Gaza, and it has miserably failed from a humanitarian, political and legal point of view, because nothing has been enough. Nothing has been sufficient to prevent and stop acts of genocide, and even as we speak, these acts continue. But it seems to me, and these are news of the past days, that the sense of impunity and Israel's hubris is not limited to Israel. I mean, even the United States has threatened to defund the United Nations if it takes, the general assembly takes, steps against Israel, because there is, finally, a discussion about suspending Israel from its membership to the General Assembly, but again, not because there are no other states committing violations of international law. But hey, here, first of all, we have a history of a state committing, persevering in violating international law through and through which led me to describe Israel as a persistent violator of international law. Therefore it is to be treated as South Africa was treated at the time of apartheid, but also Israel has committed violations, including preventing the realization of the right of self-determination of the Palestinian people, which is the right to exist as a people. You see the trajectory of the genocide as I say, this has been the dormant gene of the colonial project that Israel has enforced in Palestine, bringing it to its most extreme consequences. Therefore, I do believe that the international community is living in a face of schizophrenia, or probably we are already past that point. Part of the international community has accepted that the system can be sacrificed, that the system which was conceived and devised to protect us all, and it has protected us all, particularly in the West, not the rest, but as in the Global North, have benefited from it. And we will miss human rights very much and the United Nations system very much, multilateralism very much when they will not be there anymore. And now the uncharted territory I was talking about is that we don't know what's going to be next. We have failed the Palestinians, but we have also failed the the humanity that has mobilized to stop the genocide in Gaza. We have seen a critical shock in western democracies that have turned more more aggressive toward their own citizens, toward those protesting against the genocide, whose fundamental freedoms, like freedom of expression and freedom of association, have been curtailed. So you see, I think that there is much more in this moment that we are risking then the already unbearable, unbearable price that the Palestinians are paying. And this is something that should worry all of us, that should make all of us, including those who are completely indifferent to the fate of the Palestinians or the Israelis, and should move them into sacrificing a little bit of their comfort and taking action so that an entire people doesn't have to sacrifice everything they have.

Chris Hedges 

Thank you. That was UN Special Rapporteur Francesca Albanese on her latest report on the Occupied Territories. I want to thank Diego [Ramos] Max [Jones], Sofia [Menemenlis] and Thomas [Hedges], who produce the show. You can find me at ChrisHedges.Substack.com.
https://chrishedges.substack.com/p/genocide-as-colonial-erasure-w-francesca
« Last Edit: October 30, 2024, 05:47:11 pm by AGelbert »
So in everything, do to others what you would have them do to you, for this sums up the Law and the Prophets. Matthew 7:12

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A "Heroic" Preference for Self-Destruction Is Taking Hold in Israel
« Reply #682 on: October 30, 2024, 07:15:44 pm »
👉 Some graphics and all emojies by AGelbert. 👈


October 29, 2024 By🕯️🦉 Alastair Crooke • 1,700 Words • 145 Comments

A "Heroic" Preference for Self-Destruction Is Taking Hold in Israel

Israel teeters at the edge: it will not be able to impose itself over the plurality of   resistance that it faces.
SNIPPETS:

Centuries ago a boy was born. His parents understood that he had a remarkable fate before him which reflected the Will of the Great Shaman. His hair was light, his eyes were light green, and his skin was pale. It seemed obvious that he enjoyed divine favour. But then, one day, the boy’s father – a figure of standing – was killed. The family thus became unprotected, and nomads smashed the remains of his home. They made him a slave. They put wooden stocks over his legs so that he could not walk. He lived like a dog, and grew up like a dog, chained outside, eating rotten food, freezing on winter nights, wishing for death.

Death however spared him. When finally he did escape, his psyche was tortured. The voices inside his head; the screams of his father; the scorching fire; his mother being tortured and killed; All whispered, just destroy everything that is in your way, and these memories will be purged.

But they weren’t. His army killed millions. Nonetheless, he founded a nation of more than one million vassals. He expurgated all concepts of tribal loyalty and old identities for obedience to his State.

He did all this with a tiny army; no more than 100,000. His name comes down to us today as Genghis Khan.

What has this to do with today’s war in the Middle East? Well, firstly we have moved – in this American-facilitated Israeli war – to ‘war   without limits’. The rules of war have been evicted; human rights have been discarded; international law has been shed; and the UN Charter is no more. And, as it expands, anything goes – children in Gaza decapitated by bombs, Gaza’s hospitals bombed, and the continuous displacement and massacre of civilians.

The roots to this shift are complex. In part, they spring from the western postmodern zeitgeist. But also they reflect the same dilemma that faced a tormented, twisted Genghis Khan: How would he control the world without a big army; in fact, with only a tiny one.
Quote
“Everything that’s happened today was planned out just 50 years ago – back in 1974 and 1973”. I want to describe how the whole strategy that led to the United States today, not wanting peace, but wanting Israel to take over the whole Near East took shape gradually”, Professor Hudson has explained here and here 👉 (😕 links not available at present..).

Hudson relates:
Quote
“I met many [neocons] at the Hudson Institute, where [ I ] had worked for five years in the mid ‘70s; some of them, or their fathers, were Trotskyists. They picked up Trotsky’s idea of permanent revolution. That is, an unfolding revolution – whereas Trotsky said what began in Soviet Russia was going to spread around the world: The neocons adapted this and said, No, the permanent Revolution is the American Empire. It’s going to expand, and expand, and nothing can stop us – to the entire world”.

In their ambition, they were another Genghis Khan: the U.S., lacking the military means, would seize the Middle East using Israel as its proxy on the one hand, and Saudi-facilitated Sunni fundamentalism on the other. The Hudson Institute, under Herman Khan, persuaded the dominant political figure Scoop Jackson that Zionism could be America’s battering ram in the Middle East. That was in the early 1970s. By 1996, Scoop Jackson’s former Senate aides had crafted –specifically for Netanyahu – its Clean Break Strategy.

Explicitly, it was the blueprint for ‘a new Middle East’. It argued that the Israel proxy would be served best by regime change in surrounding countries. In March 2003, Patrick J. Buchanan, referring to the 2003 invasion of Iraq, wrote, “Their [Clean Break] plan urged Israel to [pursue regime change through] ‘the principle of preemption’”.

Professor Michael Hudson points out the design’s fatal flaw: The Vietnam War had shown that any attempted conscription by western democracies was not viable. Lyndon Johnson in 1968 had to withdraw from running for election precisely because everywhere he’d go, there would be nonstop stop-the-war demonstrations.

So what then was left to the United States and Israel? Well, what is available – if your objective is to found Greater Israel – is ‘war without limits’ [i.e positively seeking huge collateral deaths] – a war without limits such as that which Genghis Khan practised: the total annihilation of other peoples and the suppression of their separate identities. A single power – the Hobbesian ‘Leviathan’ – achieved through disarming everyone. The ultimate aim being to suppress any plurality of wills.

The flaw is that the Israelis, as the U.S. proxy force, have limited forces, both by numbers (it is a small army, dependent on reservists), and by being constrained by its ranks being drawn from a westernised, postmodern culture.
Quote
“Postmodern thinking has swept God, Nature, and Reason away. The individual replaces everything. Facts are only what he wants them to be … There are only fictions left—but these fictions are also all of reality. Western society thus begins to look very much like an insane asylum. Of course, this is only a collective paranoia: one bomb falls somewhere in our country, and very real realities, which mock our discourses, are destroyed and this philosophy collapses”, warns Dr Henri Hude.

This statement, directed more broadly at the West, however summarizes Israel exactly. The latter tries to substitute the Talmud as the epistemological basis of its society, yet young Israel is largely the same TikTok generation of individualists as in the West, whose ‘facts’ come only from what the government tells them to be. And as the bombs fall on Tel Aviv, the country sinks into collective paranoia and events mock the state panglossian discourses.

At bottom, postmodernism places the highest priority on Life and individual freedom. The capacity to adapt to the brutalities of this style of limitless war therefore hangs very much on culture. To successfully adapt to the horror of death and destruction, one must accept the very idea of sacrifice and suffering – the spilling of blood to feed the earth towards new growth.

Israel does not have a culture of sacrifice, but its adversaries do. If culture is unable to offer a meaning to the notion of sacrifice and loss, it does not put man in a position to face the tragedy of his condition.

The war without limits ideology – purely theoretically – could be a thinkable solution: Ron Dermer, a former Israeli Ambassador to the U.S. and confidant of Netanyahu, was asked a few months earlier what he saw as the solution to the Palestinian conflict. He replied that both the West Bank and Gaza must be totally dis-armed – “yes”. Yet more important than disarmament, Dermer said, was the absolute necessity that all Palestinians be “de-radicalised”. (This has now been extended to the whole region that must be ‘de-radicalised’ ).

Thus, as postmodern culture sinks into the inhuman and favours the Leviathan – with the total annihilation of other peoples and the suppression of their separate identities – the question arises, could ‘war without limits’ work? ... ...

The clear response that Dr Hude gives in his book Philosophie de la Guerre is that war without limits cannot be the solution, because it cannot deliver long-lasting ‘deterrence’ or de-radicalisation . “On the contrary, it is the most certain cause of war. Ceasing to be rational, despising opponents who are more rational than it is, arousing opponents who are even less rational than it is. The Leviathan will fall; and even before its fall, no security is assured”.

Full article plus video:
https://www.unz.com/article/a-heroic-preference-for-self-destruction-is-taking-hold-in-israel/
« Last Edit: October 31, 2024, 11:42:07 am by AGelbert »
So in everything, do to others what you would have them do to you, for this sums up the Law and the Prophets. Matthew 7:12

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MAJOR CHANGES IN MODERN WARFARE - ISRAEL VS IRAN AIR DEFENCE
« Reply #683 on: October 30, 2024, 11:57:28 pm »
ANDREI MARTYANOV & SCOTT RITTER - MAJOR CHANGES IN MODERN 🚀 WARFARE - ISRAEL VS IRAN AIR DEFENCE

🕯️🗽 Garland Nixon 73.9K subscribers Oct 29, 2024
ANDREI MARTYANOV & SCOTT RITTER - MAJOR CHANGES IN MODERN WARFARE - ISRAEL VS IRAN AIR DEFENCE
« Last Edit: October 31, 2024, 12:00:52 am by AGelbert »
So in everything, do to others what you would have them do to you, for this sums up the Law and the Prophets. Matthew 7:12

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SOURCE:
October 31, 2024 Brief report from the front by 🐻 Marat Khairullin 👍 Substack


WARRIOR UPDATE WITH SCOTT RITTER EPISODE 79 - THE MOTHER OF ALL DEBACLES - KIEV LINES COLLAPSING

Garland Nixon ✨ 73.9K subscribers October 31, 2024
WARRIOR UPDATE WITH SCOTT RITTER EPISODE 79 - THE MOTHER OF ALL DEBACLES - KIEV LINES COLLAPSING

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« Last Edit: October 31, 2024, 02:37:11 pm by AGelbert »
So in everything, do to others what you would have them do to you, for this sums up the Law and the Prophets. Matthew 7:12

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REGIME CHANGE FLOP IN GEORGIA - ARE NORTH KOREAN TROOPS IN RUSSIA, KURSK DEBACLE - WITH 🕯️🗽 MARK SLEBODA

Garland Nixon ✨ 74K subscribers Oct 31, 2024
REGIME CHANGE FLOP IN GEORGIA - ARE NORTH KOREAN TROOPS IN RUSSIA, KURSK DEBACLE - WITH MARK SLEBODA

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« Last Edit: November 02, 2024, 03:05:21 pm by AGelbert »
So in everything, do to others what you would have them do to you, for this sums up the Law and the Prophets. Matthew 7:12

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👉 Graphics and emojies by AGelbert. 👈

Alastair Crooke ✨• November 4, 2024 • 1,500 Words


Netanyahu’s "Imaginary War Narrative"  Strategy: "If It Works, Fine; if Not, No Big Deal. We’ll Try Something Else"

SNIPPET:

Though some scholars in the 19th century believed there were laws governing human behaviour, social science was swiftly disabused of the notion that a straightforward social ‘physics’ was possible according to physical iron laws.

The most common approach today, reflecting a return to data-led modelling in political ‘science’ in the western sphere, is to use empirical data from the past to tease out ordered patterns that point to stable relationships between causes and effects.

Typically, the philosophy of dialectical materialism is viewed in some capitals as the acme of an objective scientific approach to politics and human sociology – its practitioners esteemed as ‘scientists’. By smoothing over near-infinite complexity, linear syntheses make our non-linear world appear to follow the comforting progression of a single ordered line. This is a conjuring trick. And to complete it successfully, ‘scientists’ need to purge whatever is unexpected or unexplained.

Full article:
https://www.unz.com/article/netanyahus-imaginary-war-narrative-strategy-if-it-works-fine-if-not-no-big-deal-well-try-something-else/

AGelbert COMMENT:
This reality based Alastair Crooke article exposes Netanyahu’s Mens rea. Thank you, Alastair. Anyone who is objective must come to the conclusion the Netanyahu is an unrepentant war criminal. The USA needs Netanyahu and his Zionist ilk like a dog needs ticks.

That said, I wish to point out to you that there is an ideology at the root of all those morally bankrupt narrative control methods and tactics you detailed, that you did not mention, that I wish you had mentioned.

Celebrated social theorist and geographer David Harvey asked, “Is there a way to capture what (to the detriment of human civilization) is going on now”?

YES.

It’s the SOCIAL DARWINISM, stupid! Dialectic Materialism, Game Theory, Neoliberalsim, Perception “Management” and all the other ‘Might equals Right’ based pseudo-scientific, erudite sounding legerdemain claptrap theories are rooted in SOCIAL DARWINISM.

Social Darwinists believe that ethics based principles are ‘limitations pretending to be virtues’. To them, ethics are ‘feel good illusions’ that humans invented to pretend our species has empathy. To Social Darwinists, empathy is irrefutable evidence of inexcusable weakness. To them, all who are guided by ethics are deluded fools that should be eliminated from the human ‘apex predator’ gene pool for the “good” of our species.

The ideology of the Social Darwinist is indistinguishable from the despicable ideology of NAZI Germany, clearly exemplified in their brutally enforced morally bankrupt concentration camp law: “Eat your own bread, and if you can, that of your neighbor.”

Social Darwinists are governed by both unbridled greed and fear of tomorrow, which provide the morally bankrupt excuse for rejecting altruism and empathy and embracing a selfish, greed dominated, hoarding modus vivendi.

“One who fears tomorrow does not offer his bread to others. But one who is willing to divide his food with a stranger has already shown himself capable of fellowship and faith, the two things from which hope is born.” — Primo Levi, author of Survival in Auschwitz

Social Darwinism is the morally bankrupt world view that spawned the profit over people and planet neoliberal ideology. Neoliberal intellectuals like Friedrich von Hayek, Ludwig von Mises and Milton Friedman were all Social Darwinists long before they renamed laissez-faire liberalism (that had been thoroughly discredited by the Great Depression) with the catchy title of “Neoliberalism”.

Netanayhu is a Zionist. Zionism, both here in the U.S. and Israel, is also full throated Social Darwinism in practice. The only, purely cosmetic, difference between Neoliberalism and Zionism is that Zionism has sanctimonious pseudo-religious camouflage.

Here is the HERE is the LIST, straight from Proverbs, of what DEFINES NETANYAHU’s morally bankrupt BEHAVIOR (sine qua non to the Social Darwinist modus operandi) of ALL U.S. Presidents. at least since JFK was cruelly assassinated:
“These six things doth the Lord hate: yea, seven are an abomination unto him:
A proud look,
a lying tongue,
and hands that shed innocent blood,
An heart that deviseth wicked imaginations,
feet that be swift in running to mischief,
A false witness that speaketh lies,
and he that soweth discord among brethren.” — Proverbs 6:16-19

David Harvey explains that neoliberal ideology serves the following principle:

“There shall be no serious challenge to the absolute power of money to rule absolutely. And that power is to be exercised with one objective: Those possessed of money shall not only be privileged to accumulate wealth endlessly at will, but they shall have the right to inherit the earth, taking either direct or indirect dominion, not only of the land and all the resources and productive capacities that reside therein, but also assume absolute command, directly or indirectly, over the labor and creative capacities of all those others it needs. The rest of humanity shall be deemed disposable.”

If the morally bankrupt, socially destructive ideology which champions the absolute power of money to rule absolutely, while it simultaneously deems the rest of humanity disposable, is not SOCIAL DARWINISM, I don’t know what is.

MORE:
https://soberthinking.createaforum.com/who-can-you-trust/corruption-in-government/msg1119/#msg1119

« Last Edit: November 04, 2024, 03:03:40 pm by AGelbert »
So in everything, do to others what you would have them do to you, for this sums up the Law and the Prophets. Matthew 7:12

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🕯️ COL. Douglas Macgregor: Ukraine: A Collapse In Slow Motion.
« Reply #687 on: November 06, 2024, 03:42:47 pm »
🕯️ COL. Douglas Macgregor: Ukraine: A Collapse In Slow Motion.

Judge Napolitano - 🕯️ udging 🗽Freedom 475K subscribers November 6, 2024
COL. Douglas Macgregor  :  Ukraine: A Collapse In Slow Motion.

« Last Edit: November 06, 2024, 03:48:03 pm by AGelbert »
So in everything, do to others what you would have them do to you, for this sums up the Law and the Prophets. Matthew 7:12

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CAN TRUMP RESOLVE THE UKRAINE DEBACLE? 🤔
« Reply #688 on: November 07, 2024, 08:45:37 pm »
CAN TRUMP RESOLVE THE UKRAINE DEBACLE?


Garland Nixon EPISODE 80 74.4K subscribers November 7, 2024

WARRIOR UPDATE WITH SCOTT RITTER EPISODE 80 - CAN TRUMP RESOLVE THE UKRAINE DEBACLE?

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@soberthinking2102 November 7, 2024 9:00 PM
Garland, do you think the count on the House vote is being 😈 deliberately held back as blackmail against Trump's Foreign PEACE Policy Plans?  ??? Yeah, I wouldn't put it past the 🦍 MIC to coerce Trump to keep the war(s) going or 🐍 "Lose" the HOUSE of "Representatives" to the "Democratic" (SEE: Orwell) Party...

IOW, MORE WAR ☠️💰 PROFITEERING MIC "fun" and despotic "games" or GRIDLOCK + ANOTHER manufactured round of Impeachment "fun and games".

------------------------------------------------------------------

November 7, 2024

🕯️🗽 Aaron Maté: Russia On the March.


Judge Napolitano - 🕯️ Judging 🗽 Freedom 476K subscribers
Aaron Maté  :  Russia On the March.

------------------------------------------------------------------

The Chris Hedges ✨ Report

The World According to Trump (w/ 🕯️🗽 Col. Wilkerson)

The Chris Hedges YouTube Channel 60K subscribers Nov 7, 2024

Support my independent journalism at Substack: https://chrishedges.substack.com/

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Donald Trump will become the 47th president of the United States and given the host of global debacles the US has its hands in—ranging from the genocide in Gaza, to Israel’s attacks on Lebanon and Iran to the Ukraine war—nobody is quite certain what direction the country will take with the former president at the helm again.

Joining host Chris Hedges on this episode of The Chris Hedges Report is Lawrence Wilkerson, a retired Army colonel and former chief of staff to Secretary of State Colin Powell. With his extensive insights and expertise into the Middle East and American foreign policy, Wilkerson provides a valuable understanding into what a Trump presidency may look like outside of the borders of America.

Wilkerson predicts Trump will stay true to “his disdain for war,” emphasizing “it's genuine. I don't think he likes war. I don't think he likes starting wars.” Regarding Ukraine, Wilkerson thinks Trump will shut down the war effort. But when it comes to the Middle East, that commitment clashes with one of Trump’s long standing loyalties: unwavering support for Israel.

War with Iran seems increasingly likely by the day despite, according to Wilkerson, resistance from the Pentagon and prior administrations. In the case of Trump, however, “you wonder how long that resistance can hold up if the president of the United States is intent on—and this is the one place where Trump really worries me—doing everything in his power for Israel,” Wilkerson notes. He adds, “Trump has made it quite clear that that's his policy, that's his belief, and I think he's being honest about it.”

Citing war-game simulations, reports, personal sources as well as his own expertise, Wilkerson lays down the reality of potential war with Iran: sheer disaster. With sources saying that the IDF is already taking heavy casualties in Lebanon, any sort of escalation with Iran would compound the suffering of the US and Israel. “Iran will top $10 trillion, take 10 years to pacify, if it's even moderately pacified, and cost a fortune in blood and treasure,” Wilkerson warns.

Thanks for reading The Chris Hedges Report! This post is public so feel free to share it.

TRANSCRIPT (Don't miss the MANY NUGGETS of History most Americans were NEVER TOLD ABOUT!):
Chris Hedges 

Colonel Lawrence Wilkerson, retired and former chief of staff to Secretary of State Colin Powell. He is a Vietnam War veteran, who attended Airborne School, Ranger School and the Naval War College, and who as a helicopter pilot in Vietnam logged over 1,000 hours on combat missions. He went on to serve as deputy director of the Marine Corps War College at Quantico and was executive Assistant to Admiral Stewart A. Ring, United States Navy Pacific Command and Director of the United States Marine Corps War College. His disillusionment with the trajectory of U.S. foreign policy in the Middle East followed the revelations of detainee abuse, the ineptitude of post-invasion planning for Iraq and the secretive decision-making by the Bush administration that led to the invasion of Iraq. At a congressional hearing recorded on C-SPAN in June 2005, he gave his analysis of the Iraq war's motivation: "'I use the acronym OIL,' he said, 'O for oil, I for Israel and L for the logistical base necessary or deemed necessary by the so-called neocons – and it reeks through all their documents – the logistical base whereby the United States and Israel could dominate that area of the world.'" Wilkerson has said that the speech Powell made before the United Nations on February 5, 2003—which laid out a case for war with Iraq—included falsehoods of which he and Powell had never been made aware. "My participation in that presentation at the UN constitutes the lowest point in my professional life,” he has said. “I participated in a hoax on the American people, the international community and the United Nations Security Council." He called the U.N. presentation "probably the biggest mistake of my life.” He has taught at the College of William & Mary and George Washington University. He is a Senior Fellow at the Eisenhower Media Network, a group of former military, intelligence and civilian national security officials who describe themselves as  offering "alternative analyses untainted by Pentagon or defense industry ties" and countering "Washington’s establishment narrative on most national security issues of the day." Joining me to discuss U.S. foreign policy, the conflicts raging in the Middle East, including the genocide in Gaza, and the fate of the American empire is Lawrence Wilkerson.

Let's begin with the election and its effect. I mean, you saw the intelligence community, Milley, all sorts of figures essentially joined the Democratic campaign in support of Kamala Harris. Let's talk about why Trump triggers such deep animus within the Pentagon and the intelligence community, and what you see happening during a second Trump administration.

Lawrence Wilkerson 

I think the animus was created—within my community anyway, I still call it that, the Pentagon, the military in general—because they don't see any concerted effort on his part to express a strategic appraisal that agrees with theirs. Theirs being the one most parroted by the New York Times, for example, and others of their ilk, who are simply spokespersons for the military industrial complex and for the national security state, which we have most assuredly become. And so they're worried about anyone who would come in and threaten to break the china. And that's what Trump that's what his forte is, starting to break the china. And they're very protective of their china, just as are the national security agencies in general and the 16, I guess it's 16 now, entities that we have that are supposed to be our intelligence eyes and ears, led by the CIA. Not led by the DNI, because he still has no real power over the CIA, but led by the CIA. I would say Bill Burns is the most powerful guy in the United States with regard to intelligence and what goes to the White House and what doesn't go to the White House. So that's part of the reason they just don't know this guy, except from the first term. And the first term would not, through Kelly and Milley and other people's eyes, give you much hope if you were a Pentagon member of the bureaucracy, if you will. The second reason, I think, is because he's so mercurial. He's all over the map, and the military doesn't like that at all. They like constancy, even if it's incorrect constancy. They prefer constancy to change and mercurial nature. And I think that's a problem with them. And there's a third reason too, and that is that they're worried about what I call Christian nationalism, some of them anyway, others are aiding and abetting it. And what that means, in essence, is not just this far flung, but very ripe and alive effort by certain Christian groups in America to make Christianity the national religion, to change the Constitution in that effect, or to discard the Constitution with regard to religion, but they're worried that they have flag officers in the military who are very much Christian nationalists. We have an occasion right now that we're looking at it, the Military Religious Freedom Foundation, Mikey Weinstein's group out in New Mexico, where the [inaudible], the three star general who is the chief of personnel, the personnel man for the Chief of Staff of the Army is married to a woman who rolls in the aisle and speaks in tongues. And Mikey's obtained a video of this general in uniform being at one of her gatherings with this group. That's just the surface, if you will. There are people like General Flynn, for example, who are still in the military. So that's disconcerting for the bulk of the military that doesn't subscribe to this theory or this desire to do away with the Constitution when it comes to freedom of religion. Those things are bothering them, and Trump has shown a propensity to use the Christian movement in this country for political gain and to not have much in the way of regard for what that might mean otherwise. So that's disturbing.

Chris Hedges 

Yeah, I graduated from Harvard Divinity School and wrote a book on the Christian right a little over a decade ago, called American Fascist: The Christian Right and the War on America. And of course, I know Mikey's work well. Let's just unpack that. Why do they see Christian nationalism—it's interesting that you raise that as an issue—why do they see that as such an important issue? Just explain, in their vision, and perhaps yours, how that could roll out in a really negative way. You're

Lawrence Wilkerson 

You're talking about the way the military looks at it, yeah, at least those who aren't... Yeah, I think they're most concerned about it in terms of what it might mean for the tyranny that would have to come along with it, and they're having to enforce that tyranny, because if you make Christianity the national religion, and that's their ultimate goal, is to not just put Bibles in classrooms and stop abortions completely, not those social issues that always loom up, and paint them with their brush. The secret that they want no one to know until it happens is they do want Christianity to be the national religion. In that regard, we even have a branch of American Catholics who are working on this. If you look closely at what's happened in the last 50 years, in particular, with the Catholic Church. My wife was Catholic, so I'm aware of some of the things in the Catholic church that I wouldn't have been aware of had she not been. She's passed away now. But if you look closely at it, there is this behind the scenes movement in America to create an American Catholic Church. We don't like it being in Rome, its head being in Rome. We don't like Francis in particular. We despise Francis. And when I say, "we" I'm using a rhetorical device to describe these people. We'd like to have our own Pope and our own Catholic Church. And there are people, some would say, one or two on the Supreme Court right now, are of that mind too, and would work for that, or might be working for that, were they given the occasion to do so. You put that together, that Roman Catholicism, Opus Dei like Roman Catholicism, and the other people who are, for example, like John Hagee fund funding millions of dollars to West Bank settlers in Israel, even now. And you've got a real fear on the part of rational military people, this might get out of hand Be more specific, in what way? If you make Christianity the national religion, and you do all the things that you would have to do, constitutionally and otherwise, or just totally disregard the Constitution in that process. What you get, as we have just seen probably enough Americans behind you to do it, then you have a whole different ball game for the military. Because the military then is called on, domestically and otherwise, and most Americans don't understand the domestic missions that the Army in particular, but the military in general, has to defend that, and they don't want to. They think that's fractious, they think that's unconstitutional. They think that's something that would cause more harm than good. And I'm glad to say that there are still some people like that left in my military.

Chris Hedges 

Well I mean, Trump has an ideological void, of course, but we saw in his first term that he filled it with these Christian nationalists or Christian fascists, Betsy DeVos, Mike, Pence, Bill Barr and others. Certainly it appears that they will fill that void again. I want to talk about Ukraine.

Lawrence Wilkerson 

Let me add one other thing. This is not just Trump. Remember, I served in the George W. Bush administration. I cannot tell you how many times I had to deal with the White House personnel office over such things as this man can't go to Iraq. Why can't he go to Iraq? Why can't he serve in Iraq? He's not a Christian. Talk about counterintuitive.

Chris Hedges 

Let's talk about Ukraine. I mean, Trump has deviated from the establishment consensus on Ukraine, I never understood, perhaps you can unpack it for me, the whole Ukraine policy, other than as a kind of proxy war to degrade the Russian military and isolate Putin. I was in East Germany when the Berlin Wall came down as a reporter. I was there when the promises were made to Gorbachev not to extend NATO beyond the borders of a unified Germany. And of course, as you know, the Soviet Union had to acquiesce to the reunification of Germany. And that was the promise made. And I'm not defending the invasion, obviously, of Ukraine, but we certainly baited the Russians and Putin. But let's talk about Ukraine. I don't see how any military strategist seriously could think that in a war of attrition, the Ukrainians could dominate, but explain what's happening and then how you see if there isn't going to be a difference, how you see a difference in a Trump administration's policy towards Ukraine and Russia.

Lawrence Wilkerson 

Let me say, first I was there too. I was special assistant to Chairman Powell, and the change that took place with the advent of Bill Clinton was absolutely disastrous, and I attribute to William Jefferson Clinton a lot of the problems we're living with today, including the violation, major violation of that promise not to expand NATO. That's a longer story, better enough for another time. I think what we're looking at in Ukraine vis a vis Trump, or Trump vis a vis Ukraine, is his—and I think Doug McGregor, for example, is right about this, I just watched him on Judge Napolitano's show—is his disdain for war. I think it's genuine. I don't think he likes war. I don't think he likes starting wars. I don't think he would be a president who... He'll go off and kill someone like the Iranian IRGC member or other people whom he's told are terrorists or whatever. But I don't think he wants war. [inaudible] war, and so he's willing to shut down Ukraine. Now there's another reason too. I think he detests NATO for different reasons than I. I don't like NATO much either. I think it's well beyond its sell by date. And he sees NATO as being—and he's right in this—as being an aider and abettor, Brussels is, of the war in Ukraine, as Washington is, led by that perfidious [inaudible]. And so he wants to shut that down. And I think his ultimate goal is to not abandon NATO per force, but he wants to get the United States out of its relationship with NATO, which he thinks we pay for everything we do, all the heavy lifting they do very little. Come back to the United States, as it were, and say you've got our nuclear envelope, but everything else you do because we're not with you anymore, and of course, save the money that that saves too. I think it was part of his first term, and he just didn't get to do it the way he wanted to do it. So those, I think, are the major reasons that he will be positive with regard to Ukraine. Because you're right, Ukraine is a disaster right now. Yeah, and most apparently, for Ukraine, they're dying by the dozens every day now, and they have no people left. They're having difficulty, they're having to impress young people, bring them into the military to get them to fight. And they're lucky if they don't desert within the first week, because either going over to the Russians or running away wherever they can go. It's a disaster. And we don't have generals in the Pentagon saying this. Now we have Lloyd Austin, he's right there with Joe Biden. But we don't have generals in the Pentagon, in my view, anyway, who are expressing these kinds of views that generals on the outside are expressing like David Petraeus and Barnes and other generals, who are saying, well, Russia is losing. They're lying through their teeth. They're lying through their teeth, either that or they're just stupid and incredibly dumb, really, not just stupid. So I think Trump would shut that down. And I'm looking forward to that. I hope he does. I hope he shuts it down forth with,

Chris Hedges 

Well, they should have read the history of Germany's invasion of the Soviet Union. Stalin would send out a million men who would either get captured or die, and then he'd just send out another million, kind of the Putin strategy.

Lawrence Wilkerson 

And people don't realize that the Wehrmacht—right after it invaded, really, the first 14 months—began to lose almost immediately, partly because of its repine as it moved along, it made enemies of everyone in its path, even Napoleon wasn't that stupid. And partly because they overextended and partly because the rule of thumb that Hitler thought would work, his food minister told him it would work, that all that food coming from Ukraine and the steps of Russia would feed not only the Wehrmacht forces going that way, but Germany, too didn't come true.

Chris Hedges 

Yeah, that's because the Russians destroyed everything, scorched earth policy, we can do another show on World War II, which I have an obsession with, but he also split his forces because of Stalingrad. Let's talk about the Middle East. What will be the difference between a Biden administration and a Trump administration vis a vis the genocide in Gaza, in Lebanon, the attacks in Lebanon, which I want you to talk about, because they're not going particularly well for Israel. And then this knife's edge we're sitting on between Israel and Iran.

Lawrence Wilkerson 

I could get very complicated and complex here and try to describe what I think is going on over there, and I've made as much of an effort as probably anyone in this country to keep up with it. But let me just say right now what I'm concerned about with Trump coming in. I'm concerned about something happening between the time that this is all consolidated, which won't be long, apparently, and the inauguration and what the Biden administration does this.

Chris Hedges 

Let me just interrupt you, Larry, what do you mean by consolidated?

Lawrence Wilkerson 

Well, there's going to be some court cases and other things, I'm sure, but it's going to be pretty quick. I think, because the margin of victory is so great. May look razor thin, but it's pretty great, from what I've seen, popular vote and electoral college. So all those things that the election task force I was a member of, for example, were worried about with a razor thin margin aren't going to happen. So we're going to get satisfied, and the votes to the Electoral College, and the process complete pretty quickly. I don't think the Democrats will be like the Republicans would be had it been the other way around. And I'm a Republican, so I can get away with saying that. I'm worried about what's going to happen because I think Bibi [Netanyahu] is still intent, and firing Yoav Gallant was indicative of this par excellence. He's still intent on going after Iran, but he's intent on the United States going with him. And the force deployments that we've made, the force deployments we're making right now, the number of troops we're sending actually to Israel right now, indicates to me that we are cognizant of this fact. We might not be yet ready to go along with it, but we are cognizant of it to the point where we're putting the forces in place that we think will be necessary. I think we're wrong. I think we're going to get our rear ends handed to us if we do what Netanyahu wants to do with regard to Iran, which is full bore war. We're going to find out how weak we are when we do it. If Iraq and Afghanistan weren't sufficient, this will certainly seal the deal. But I'm worried about this interim period, and what the Biden administration might actually do in this interim period, not just to do what Bibi wants them to do, and what I think Joe Biden is inclined to do, but to mess Trump up. I mean, what better way than for the inauguration takes place while we're involved in a huge war in the Middle East, and it would be a huge war if we go at it big time the way Bibi wants, and we discover immediately that we can't do what we think we're going to do in a short period of time. It's the old bugaboo again. You know, air power, air power, air power, air power is not going to defeat Iran. It is not going to stop their nuclear program, it's not going to defeat them. So you wind up with a choice, you either invade or you stop. And that's not much of a choice, very bad choice, as a matter of fact.

Chris Hedges 

So my understanding is the Pentagon was always reticent. They did not want, they blocked, I mean, there was a huge push in the interim between Bush and Obama to go to war with Iran and you know more about it than I do, my understanding is the Pentagon just said absolutely not.

Lawrence Wilkerson 

They are saying that now, but you wonder how long that resistance can hold up if the president the United States is intent on—and this is the one place where Trump really worries me—doing everything in his power for Israel. And Trump has made it quite clear that that's his policy, that's his belief, and I think he's being honest about it. Of course, there's the AIPAC business and the money involved, and Trump is, if anything, a transactional, "I want the money" man, but I think he's committed to it in a way that Miriam Adelson, for example, indicates in the amount of money that she gave.

Chris Hedges 

She's his largest donor, I think, $100 million, right? Well, what would be the difference, then, between a Trump administration vis a vis Israel and a Biden administration? Can't get any worse for the Palestinians in Gaza. What would be the difference?

Lawrence Wilkerson 

I agree with you, although there was, I think, and perhaps this is applicable on the other side too, but there was some political space opening up for Harris. I think she was made aware, vividly aware, of how much the Gaza policy, if you will, with regard to the Biden administration, had harmed them. I would say it probably lost them almost a quarter of the progressives that would have voted for them otherwise, particularly in some of the battleground states, key states. And that political space opening up, might have changed policy with her somewhat. I'm not saying it would be a [inaudible] but I am saying it might have been a more mellow policy with regard to Israel, and a harder policy on Netanyahu and a complicit policy—and we could do this if we wanted to—to get him out of there. We have the power to get him out of there if we wanted to use it. He's his own worst enemy in that regard. But we're not. We're not doing that. We're leaving him in there, partly because we know that those around him who might replace him would be just as bad as he, but with maybe a little bit better record and a little bit better outlook on things, especially getting the hostages back. And we've got some hostages that are left alive there too, so that political space would have given her room, I think to change policy somewhat, to meddle our policy a little bit. I don't think Trump will do that. I think Trump is in for a penny, in for a pound for Israel. And that's dangerous. I just was looking this morning at the meeting between the Saudi National Security Advisor, Blinken and Jake Sullivan and others, and very indicative of what's happening right now. The Saudis were very forceful about not making a deal until there was a Palestinian state deal that looked like it might have some viability politically, if not in reality. Now they are here, and he just inked the deal, so to speak, making a bilateral relationship go. Israel's not even in it, a security relationship. And this adds to the one we just did with the UAE, we just did with Bahrain. All of them are different deals, but they all amount to almost non-NATO major ally status. We just did one with Qatar, where  Al Udeid is, the biggest Air Force base in the world, and it looks as if the GCC, the Gulf Cooperation Council, is sort of being wedged aside and we're doing all these bilateral treaties, if you will, with these countries. They don't have the force of treaties, but they're executive agreements for defense cooperation and so forth, and so that means Mohammed bin Salman is now playing the typical Saudi game of "I like Russia, I like China, but the United States is my old haven, and I need the United States," so I'm gonna make a bilateral deal with them. If that's happening, they're worried about Iran, even though they're talking more with Tehran than they've done in the past, as are all the states, they're worried. They're worried about what might happen. They're worried about what Iran might do if Israel doesn't attack Iran's oil facilities, because Iran will wipe out all the oil facilities it can in the Gulf region, 20% of the world's oil supply. It won't make any difference that we're 22 million barrels a day now if they do that, because the price of oil will go to $300 a barrel, insurers won't insure and shippers want ship, then we'll have a real problem. And the Saudis know that, that's their nest egg, that's their future. They don't want to put that in jeopardy, so they're back with the United States. Now this is a very strange meeting, in my view, because the words were not there to support it, and then suddenly he's here doing this. I'm worried. I'm worried that we might be walking into a war that we cannot walk away from because of Netanyahu.

Chris Hedges 

But the Saudis, Qatar, they've all made it very clear that the US is not allowed to use these bases if there are strikes against Iran.

Lawrence Wilkerson 

Well, the prime minister in Baghdad did too, but we went ahead and let the Israelis fly over Iraq. And I'm told that the King of Jordan said no. Then we did it anyway, and rather than looking like a fool, he said he had grudgingly given permission, so we don't seem to care about what they think. And if it comes down to it, as this visit has just testified to I think, if it comes down to it, and they have to choose, they're going to do what we want to do.

Chris Hedges 

I want to talk about what a war with Iran would look like. The Iranian Air Force, as I understand, is pretty decrepit, not very effective, outdated fighters, many going all the way back to the Shah. I don't know what their air defenses are like. Certainly it would start out as an aerial bombing campaign. Would it look like the bombing campaign that we carried out under the Clinton administration against Iraq during the sanctions? Well, what's it going to look like?

Lawrence Wilkerson 

It's not going to look anything like that. In fact, it's going to look quite different. And it's principally because of China, but more so Russia. I think the Israelis, in this last attempt, they're lying about it now, and I have that from very good sources, they're lying about it. They're propagandizing it. They didn't do any damage at all to speak of to Iran, and the reason they didn't was because they ran into a buzz saw of Russian provided air defense systems. They didn't know what to do. They didn't know how to read the radars. They didn't know how to jam the radars. Their suppression of enemy air defense, SEAD, did not work. They took a few out, but it didn't work enough to where the pilots thought they could go any further. So they launched all their missiles, as I think was the plan originally, for the first echelon. After the SEAD got through from outside Iran, they were deterred from going inside, and they would be deterred again. And there's every reason to believe that there might be some S400s, as well as S300s on the ground and the S400, sorry Lockheed Martin, sorry, Raytheon consumed by Lockheed Martin, is the best air defense system in the world. That's another thing that's happening right now that's disturbing our defense contractors, Chinese and Russian equipment is out doing in Ukraine and in the Middle East, American equipment, which is three or four times as expensive. One of the reasons India is back with Russia again for its armaments and such, despite what our protests are. So we're looking at a situation where we will think that aerial will be all we'll have to do, that is to say bombing. Israel is going to think that, Israel really can't do anything other than bomb Iran, ballistic missiles and bombing, air launched cruise missiles and such as that. It's not going to do it. It's not going to work. It's simply not going to work. There'll be some damage done. There will be some toll in Tehran and elsewhere, in the outlying territories where the nuclear facilities are and such. But it's not going to work. So what do you do then? I've war gamed this. I war-gamed it with the Lieutenant General in the Marine Corps who took great censure from his own buddies in the Pentagon. He was retired at the time, but he used to be my boss when I was down at Quantico War College, and he said we would lose. He ran the war game two times just to prove that the computers were not wrong. I think he's right. I think one of the things the Iranians will do is take out a US aircraft carrier, that's 5,000 US souls on the bottom of the sea or in the water. And incidentally, we now have so few escorts for our CVs, our aircraft carriers, that let's say there are 2,000 sailors in the water, we couldn't rescue them all because we don't have birth space on the escort ships. Interesting development there. We can't even man some of our ships because we're so short in terms of recruiting. I think it would be a disaster. And what do we do when we get into a disaster like that? It's America. We don't back away. We don't retrench. We don't check our six and look around and say, maybe we made an error. We double down. That's what we'll do, and then it will be a full fledged war. And if you like Iraq, and you like Afghanistan, Iran will top $10 trillion, take 10 years to pacify, if it's even moderately pacified and cost a fortune in blood and treasure.

Chris Hedges 

You're talking about ground forces going in? 

Lawrence Wilkerson 

That's the only way you rid the country...

Chris Hedges 

Yeah, that's true. But where do they go in from? Iraq?

Lawrence Wilkerson 

Well, you'd have to sit down and do what we did in the Pacific when we were... I actually had the war plan for taking on the Soviets in Iran. You recall, we were very worried about them, looking for a warm water port around [inaudible] a typical Russian Empire thing to do, go back and check the history of the Russian Empire. We thought that was the case. So out in the Pacific, the force provider for all of this, we were war planning for fighting the Russians, the Soviets, inside Iran, in the Zagros Mountains and elsewhere. I know that terrain really well. It's not Iraq, very different country. Great strategic depth, 53% Persian. Great homogeneity amongst that 53% lot of problems around the periphery, but basically a homogeneous population, 10 years, $10 trillion and you still haven't solved what you wanted to solve, which was to defeat the nation anymore than...

Chris Hedges 

I'm just curious, where would the ground troops go in from? I have a hard time believing the Iraqi government, which is...

Lawrence Wilkerson 

We are illegal, illegal under international law and under our own domestic law. We are illegally present in Syria right now.

Chris Hedges 

That's true.

Lawrence Wilkerson 

We're there protecting oil going to Israel.

Chris Hedges 

Which Trump said, got him in a lot of trouble, but was an honest statement.

Lawrence Wilkerson 

Yeah, and we would go through Syria without batting an eye.

Chris Hedges 

Yeah, let's talk about how it might start...

Lawrence Wilkerson 

Incidentally, when we were doing the war gaming out in the Pacific, our major invasion was amphibious. That'd be a little difficult today, we had a lot of amphibious bottoms. The ones we have today are broken. Ask the [inaudible] Marine Corps, and we don't have many.

Chris Hedges 

How would it start? So there would be an Iranian strike on Israel with significant Israeli casualties. What do you see as the trigger?

Lawrence Wilkerson 

The debate in Tehran is heated right now, I'm told. This is about 48 hours old, but Doug Macgregor sort of confirmed it this morning. The debate is between the different groups of security personnel in Tehran, the IRGC, The Guardian Council, the Ayatollah, the new president, so forth. Do we continue with our previous plan? And the previous plan was we're going to smack them and we're going to smack them really hard. Israel has seen nothing like what's coming. Much in the way they're seeing real casualties, significant casualties in Lebanon right now. The debate as to whether to go ahead and do that or not, because they don't want the new president in particular, doesn't want war with the United States. They got enough problems. They don't want war with the United States. I don't know how that debate is going to fall out, but if they decide, and Netanyahu wants them to decide this, I'm quite confident of that, to go back whole hog at Israel and do some really significant damage that his propaganda machine cannot hide, which he has done a lot of up to this point, like, for example, hiding the casualties in Lebanon. The casualties are enormous in Lebanon right now, for the IDF, they're enormous.

Chris Hedges 

Have you heard a figure? I have not. Have you heard a number?

Lawrence Wilkerson 

I've heard 4,000. And here's the kicker, modern armies do not show loss or win by KIA [killed in action], battle, tactical, operational, whatever. They show it by WIA [wounded in action] because they have such sophisticated battlefield surgery and such sophisticated hospitals that... look at our casualties in Afghanistan, what you have is high rates of WIA, the WIA is over 4,000. That's missing arms, missing legs, you know, whatever. So when you're looking at a modern army fighting on interior lines in Israel, it's very interior lines. No evacuation route, hardly at all. You look at the WIA, not the KIA and the WIA in Lebanon are screamingly high right now, particularly for the IDF. I think you'll see them leaving very shortly, you'll see them leaving or moving.

Chris Hedges 

They haven't moved very far.

Lawrence Wilkerson 

No, not at all.

Chris Hedges 

In terms of interior lines, they haven't gone very far into Lebanon.

Lawrence Wilkerson 

What they're doing is precisely what they do almost every time they encounter this kind of resistance, though they've never encountered this stiff resistance, they bomb the hell out of the cities and the infrastructure, right? They killed Lebanese,

Chris Hedges 

They got driven out in '82 and of course, that's the invasion that created Hezbollah. I remember Sy Hersh telling me a little while ago that the reason that Netanyahu wants the United States to engage Iran is because he needs the US to take out Iran's air defense systems, which seems to be in agreement with what you said. Would that be correct?

Lawrence Wilkerson 

I think so. But I think we are going to get a rude surprise too, when we lose F-35s, extended range F-15s, F-16s and other flights that will come out of Al Udeid and off carriers, F-18s and such. We're going to lose a lot too. The war game said 30% attrition.

Chris Hedges 

And is Israel's motive the same as pushing us to invade Iraq, which is Iran is a powerful center within the region that it wants to essentially cripple the way it crippled Iraq, is that the motive behind the Israeli push for a war with Iran?

Lawrence Wilkerson 

I think that's the major motive behind it. They see Iran as the last impediment to their hegemony in the region.

Chris Hedges 

Let's talk about Israel from a military perspective because you know so much more about this than I do. How do you look at Israel in the Middle East from a strategic point of view, as a US ally?

Lawrence Wilkerson 

As a total liability. A strategic liability of the first order. And right now, at this moment, right now, I would say Ukraine, notwithstanding, they're the greatest strategic liability we have.

Chris Hedges 

Explain why. Why?

Lawrence Wilkerson 

Because there's no positivity to it. Everything is us, nothing is them.

Chris Hedges 

But we took out a lot of those missiles coming in from Iran.

Lawrence Wilkerson 

We did. We depleted our supplies to the point now where I'm not sure even if we decided we were going to do a major aerial attack on Iran, we wouldn't run out of munitions very shortly.

Chris Hedges 

And the genocide. I mean, I think we supply 68% at this point of munitions to sustain the genocide in Gaza. Is that correct?

Lawrence Wilkerson 

At least that much. If you look at the entire panoply of things we've given Israel, I'd say, Gideon Levy at Haaretz is right when he says, you share 50/50 responsibility for every death in Gaza and, for that matter, in Lebanon too.

Chris Hedges 

How do you see it playing out in Gaza? I've actually been in the Middle East quite a bit in the last year, in Egypt twice, spent much the summer in Jordan, was in Qatar, was in the West Bank. And everything I can glean, Israel, of course, wants to push them into the Sinai. In the Egyptian military, I was told by Egyptian journalists in Cairo, has just been adamant, has told Sisi that there's no way. A Palestinian is, in fact, according to them, if Israel attempts to push the Palestinians into the Sinai and Sisi accepts them, he's finished. That's what they said. But how do you see it playing out? We know what Israel's intent is, which is, of course, depopulating, annexing northern Gaza. They're largely towards that goal, creating a humanitarian crisis in the south, but eventually ethnic cleansing, these genocidal tactics are now increasingly being used in the West Bank. How do you see it going? The US must be completely aware of what Israel's intent is. But where do you see that developing?

Lawrence Wilkerson 

There are two sets of thoughts, I think, or beliefs, strategic goals in the US, and it depends on what body of people you're talking about. Are you talking about Tom Cotton, Josh Hawley, Ted Cruz and a host of others, Lindsey Graham? Or are you talking about saner people, I would say, on the other side of the aisle, or even in the Republican Party. They think that Israel is doing our job for us, as Bibi Netanyahu is want to say if Israel was not killing or ridding the region of these Arabs, Palestinian or otherwise, and think about how MBS must think about this, we'd have to be doing it. And so he's doing us a great favor. He's doing our dirty work for us. He even has said that publicly. The other side says, No, Israel is our ally and our friend, and we have to stand by them no matter how heinous Bibi is. We'd like to get rid of Bibi. We'd like to put a different picture on Israel, but he's there, and he's in charge, and he's doing what he needs to do. And then there's the group that I belong to, I think, that says this is horrible, what we're doing. And we all warned about this in the military, we warned about this. David Petraeus even testified to Congress one day and let it slip that Israel was a greater liability than a strategic asset, and maybe we ought to think about rearranging the relationship. After that got out, of course, he walked those remarks back, as David is want to do, but the military understands how much a strategic liability Israel truly is, especially down in the ranks, where people have actually had a chance to look at it, to study it, to look at the history and to understand what's happened and understand the real history of it, which is often propagandized by the Israelis and the US for consumption by the public. But the military understands that history. The military understands [USS] Liberty, for example, they understand that those sailors were machine gunned.

Chris Hedges 

Now we should explain. That was the ship that the Israelis attacked and killed, was it 36 or something? I can't remember. 31 US sailors were killed.

Lawrence Wilkerson 

Yeah, and a bunch wounded, and I don't think there's any question, having looked at some of the investigation and some of the obscuration of that investigation, there's any doubt in my mind that Israel did it intentional.

Chris Hedges 

That was the '73 war.

Lawrence Wilkerson 

Yeah, I don't know whether it was because they thought we were picking up information that they were uploading an atomic weapon, or they thought we were sharing some of the information we were picking up with a very sophisticated spy ship, which Liberty was, with Moscow in an attempt to bring pressure on Israel. I don't know what the reason was, because they wouldn't let the investigators get into the real nitty gritty. President cut it off. But I do know that Israel knew what they were doing.

Chris Hedges 

Israel had carried out a series of massacres of captured Egyptian soldiers in the Sinai. That was one of the theories. And the ship obviously would have known about that.

Lawrence Wilkerson 

Well, you remember in the London Times, I think it was reported. And then, when the London Times was a good newspaper, and it was reported by the BBC, on Panorama, by the I can't remember his name now, terrible short term memory. I was just reading his piece last night where he's having the conversation with Golda Meir. He sent her a dozen or two or three red roses every time before he went to Israel. And she really appreciated that. So she'd give him the first interview whenever he was there. This time, she wouldn't give it to him. She said, I have to give it to the Americans, I'm sorry. And he just sent her the roses and everything. Anyway, he did talk to her on the telephone, and he reported this in that article in the London Times and on Panorama. He asked her, point blank, would you use the Samson option? I don't think he used that phrase. He said, would you use a nuclear weapon if Israel's existence were in question? Without batting an eye she said, of course. And he said, you understand what that means? And she said, Yes. Now was that for public consumption so that people would understand that Israel was serious about winning this conflict, a conflict they started? The Egyptians didn't start the '73 war.

Chris Hedges 

Yeah, I know. That's another myth they peddled.

Lawrence Wilkerson 

But I do think that Netanyahu, if his back was to the wall and he were forced to do so, the big question, of course, that was being asked was, even if you knew you would be taking the world into a nuclear holocaust, would you still do it? Yes.

Chris Hedges 

I mean, how much damage do you think Iran can inflict on Israel? Israel's a small country. I think it has a population of 6 million. What does Iran have 90 million? I mean, I can't remember.

Lawrence Wilkerson 

If you're talking about between the river and the sea, about 14 million Israeli citizens. 7 million plus are Palestinian and 7 million, not quite as much, are Jews. Very small, not as small as Gaza, no bigger than the Greater London, or smaller than Greater London. Gaza is where they're dropping all that ordinance, just putting the military template on it and saying, how many casualties, how many casualties have been... that ordinance, that concrete, that rebar, those streets, those buildings, the template puts down on the terrain and says, with great accuracy, how many casualties? It's 200,000. Guarantee it's not 40 or 50,000. The template says it's well north of 100,000 and we'll not know, because you won't find some of these people, they're buried so deeply under rubble. If Israel were to really be attacked by the full weight of Iran, it would be a nightmare for Israel. It's becoming that way just with Hezbollah. You're never going to get those Israelis to go back to their homes. They're going to evacuate Israel eventually. I was told the other day by a friend in Tel Aviv that already, by his count, a million Jewish Israelis have departed.

Chris Hedges 

Since October 7, yeah, that's numbers they've hidden. But I've heard 500,000 but certainly a significant number have just left the country. And these are often the best educated, they tend to be the secular part of society.

Lawrence Wilkerson 

Putin was exercising his prudence and strategic verve by offering any of the Russians who had immigrated to Israel: come back, we need you, you're our brain trust.

Chris Hedges 

Yeah. I mean, one of the things, just to talk about the Israel-US relationship, is that [Jonathan] Pollard who gave Israel all sorts of intelligence information, he gave them information on CIA and Russian assets, which allowed the Soviets to roll it all up but he gave it to Israel, and then Israel was giving it to the Soviet Union in exchange for the release of Jewish citizens of the Soviet Union. But it destroyed the, obliterated the intelligence operation of the US in the Soviet Union.

Lawrence Wilkerson 

And Pollard is now, I'm told, I learned this 24 hours ago, Pollard is now instrumental in and very important to Bibi's propaganda effort with regard to Gaza and Lebanon. A traitor, and we let him go, and Bill Clinton did almost as much damage as Trump in that regard with Pollard. Bill Clinton pardon Marc Rich as his last ignominious act in office. I think it was David Rothkopf, or someone, said that was the most ignominious use of the pardon power by the president in the history of the country. I think they were right.

Chris Hedges 

You should explain who he was.

Lawrence Wilkerson 

Marc Rich really ran a company that, a huge company that sold, amongst other products, discounted price oil to Israel, and was responsible, in large measure, for Israel's economic success under the finance minister named Bibi Netanyahu, and then later, as he became prime minister, interrupted only by his fellow mate, Ari Sharon. Marc Rich made sure that Saddam Hussein's oil in the UN Oil-for-Food Programme was stolen and shipped to Israel. He also made sure that the pipeline in Syria, the one we were just talking about, was pumping to Israel. And he made sure that, eventually, the pipeline out of Kirkuk, out of northern Iraq, which has always had a problem with Baghdad, was shipping to Israel. So one of the reasons Israel's neo... what do you call their system of capitalism? It's not quite what ours is, but they have more billionaires per capita than we do. He made that happen with that discounted oil and now look at what Netanyahu has done. He had inked an agreement with Lebanon for the richest gas field in the Mediterranean thus far. That's abrogated, it's all belonging to Israel. Now there was a deal that Gaza had the second richest gas field in the Mediterranean for its own. That's gone, he's got that too. 30 years of the future needs of Israeli energy are contained in those two gas fields. He's got them both. Yeah, they're off the coast of Lebanon and Israel. That's an important point that's often missed in terms of the occupation of Northern Gaza, because they need the coastline. Let's just close by talking about the institutions themselves, the CIA, the Pentagon, which, and I mean, I'll characterize it, but you can correct me if I'm wrong, these institutions appear hostile to a Trump presidency, especially the intelligence community. How much can they damage, constrain, control Trump? That's an excellent question. First of all, the intent has to be there, and it has to be at some of the higher levels in order to do that. I'm not sure it's going to be particularly because he can take care of those levels if he wants to. But if it is there at the second echelon, so to speak, or the second, third echelons, it can be disturbing of anything that he wants to do as it could any president. It can falsify intelligence. It can lead the president astray with regard to serious national security issues. Right now, one of the most serious issues Trump's going to face, I think, I'm no economist, but I know a lot of economists, and they're telling me, the bond market right now is what we should be looking at, not the stock market. In fact, the stock market is euphoric and for the rich. The bond market is saying Trump is going to have one of the worst economic situations by midterm in our history. Our aggregate debt is also saying that. CBO released a report saying it's $50.2 trillion in a decade, decade and a half. The interest payments on that debt are already the defense budget equivalent, almost a trillion dollars, this year, almost a trillion dollars. By the end of that period, the CBO looked at about 10 to 12 years, and they think they're being optimistic, it's going to be 2 trillion. It's going to be the equivalent of Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid and the defense budget combined. We cannot sustain that under anybody's rules of gerrymandering the financial system in the world or whatever, we just can't stand that. And when the American people understand some of this intuitively, and the crisis of confidence comes with that understanding, and many are saying it's going to happen on Trump's watch, he's going to have a real problem, and he's going to have to retrench majorly. I don't know what they're going to do. I don't know what we're going to do as a country when this comes to bear with full force.

Chris Hedges 

All right. Well, that was Colonel Lawrence Wilkerson. I want to thank Diego [Ramos] Sofia [Menemenlis], Thomas [Hedges] and Max [Jones] who produced the show. You can find me at Chris Hedges.Substack.com.
« Last Edit: November 08, 2024, 12:38:13 pm by AGelbert »
So in everything, do to others what you would have them do to you, for this sums up the Law and the Prophets. Matthew 7:12