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[News] Middle East conflict



Tom Hark Preston Park

Will Post For Cash
Jul 6, 2003
72,292
I fear that too.

One evil by Hamas last week.

Potentially a new evil by Israel to come very soon.
The US, aided and abetted by the UK, carried out the illegal and immoral invasion of Iraq primarily in response to 9/11. This is Israel's 9/11. The response will be equally heavy-handed and ill-judged. The global repercussions will be felt for decades :down:
 




dejavuatbtn

Well-known member
Aug 4, 2010
7,569
Henfield
Katya Adler has just done apiece on Jeremy Vine’s show that summed up the issues between Israel and Palestine very well. Neither side came out smelling of roses. Banging your head a against a brick comes to mind.
 


schmunk

Why oh why oh why?
Jan 19, 2018
10,335
Mid mid mid Sussex
Bibi is mad enough to send the troops in to flatten north Gaza, but I don't see settlements there. The plan is to kill 'terrorists' and dismantle the war infrastructure. This amounts to creating a horrible mess and killing large numbers of civilians who have traditionally been used as a human shield by Hamas.

In other words, it will be days of extreme smiting followed by abandonment of a complete and utter mess, piles of bodies, etc.
Will Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport - Lucy Frazer MP - then berate the FA for not lighting up the Wembley arch in Palestine colours, I wonder?

 


1066familyman

Radio User
Jan 15, 2008
15,233
I cannot understand why they are embracing a right wing ideology and stance on persecution.
Religious bigotry should be a thing of the past, in fact I would have thought as a humans we should have moved on from religion altogether as an excuse for personal bigotry and ignorance.

Bigotry isn't a thing of the past sadly, so why would religious bigotry be any different?

I see an awful lot of bigotry towards people of faith. I thought humans would have moved on from that, but sadly they haven't.
 


Bozza

You can change this
Helpful Moderator
Jul 4, 2003
57,250
Back in Sussex
Modern warfare, eh? I just opened X and the first thing I saw was the below which was a PAID AD...





Screenshot 2023-10-13 at 12.51.48.png
 




Wardy's twin

Well-known member
Oct 21, 2014
8,855
I cannot understand why they are embracing a right wing ideology and stance on persecution.
Religious bigotry should be a thing of the past, in fact I would have thought as a humans we should have moved on from religion altogether as an excuse for personal bigotry and ignorance.
It's not just religion though , it's race, colour, nationality, left, right. You name it and man will find a way to identify with one view to discriminate against another.
 


jackanada

Well-known member
Jul 19, 2011
3,504
Brighton
Seems to be a woeful lack of anyone in leadership urging restaurant towards Israel.
Using the past 20 years as a guide they'll be looking to kill 1 million Palestinians before easing up.
 






shingle

Well-known member
Jan 18, 2004
3,222
Lewes
I'm not sure that highlighting how 1.8 million under a total blockade, running out of food and water, 50, 000 pregnant women unable to access services, no electricity, hospitals unable to function, hundreds of children killed, 6,000 bombs dropped on area that extends the distance of Worthing to Eastbourne, and more than 50% of that population being given 24 hours to shift or face death is engaging in 'whataboutery'.

There is no difference between a Hamas militant and an F35 jet. They both murder innocent people for political reasons.
Do you really see it as that simple?
 


Wardy's twin

Well-known member
Oct 21, 2014
8,855
This Letter was posted on another thread and I am grateful to the OP for uploading it - I’m copying it and reposting here in case it has been missed. It shouldn’t be missed. It should be read by everyone - not just because it is informative, both historically and politically but it is simply one of the most eloquent and insightful expositions I have ever read of the Israel/Palestinian question and the human cost that conundrum continues to exact on all those impacted by it. It is also an example of how achieving a true balance in how we view the situation in Gaza and the current conflict is entirely within our grasp as human beings …..


It’s very long.

“I've been reading articles like the one below for the past 25 years from both Israelis and Palestinians... And hearing it from their own mouths, in person and by email. There are still some who refuse binary categorisation, who have a deep knowledge of the region's history - recent and millenial --, who empathise with their fellow man and understand the extent to which hate overcomes reason and the difficulty we have in listening to the better angels of our nature. The human race, unfortunately, is still an immature, stroppy child unwilling and unable to take action that would clearly be in its best interests and bring long-term benefits.

Isaac Saul

@Ike_Saul

People ask me all the time if I am "pro-Israel" because I am a Jew who has lived in Israel, and my answer is that being "pro-Israel" or being "pro-Palestine" or being a "Zionist" does not properly capture the nuance of thought most people do or should have about this issue. It certainly doesn't capture mine.

I have a lot to say. I’ve spent the last 72 hours writing, texting, and talking to Israelis, Jews, Muslims, and Palestinians. Much of my reaction is going to piss off people on "both sides," but I am exhausted and hurting and I do not think there is any way to discuss this situation without being radically honest about my views. So I'm going to try to say what I believe to be true the best I can.

Let me start with this: It could have been me.

That's a hard thought to shake when watching the videos out of Israel — the concert goers fleeing across an empty expanse, the hostages being paraded through the streets, the people shot in the head at bus stops or in their cars. I went to those parties in the desert, I rubbed shoulders with Israelis and Arabs and Jews and Muslims, I could have easily accepted an invitation to some concert near Sderot and gone without a care, only to be indiscriminately slaughtered. Or, perhaps worse, taken hostage and tortured.

I don’t believe Hamas is killing Israelis to liberate themselves, nor do I believe they are doing it to make peace. They're doing this because they represent the devil on the shoulder of every oppressed Palestinian who has lost someone in this conflict. They're doing it because they want vengeance. They are evening the score, and acting on the worst of our human impulses, to respond to blood with blood — an inclination that is easy to give in to after what their people have endured. It should not be hard to understand their logic — it is only hard to accept that humans are capable of being driven to this. Not defending Hamas is a very low bar to clear. Please clear it.

It’s not possible to recap the entire 5,000 year history of people fighting over this strip of land in one newsletter. There are plenty of easily accessible places you can learn about it if you want to (and, by the way, many of you should — far too many people speak on this issue with an obscene amount of ignorance, loads of arrogance, and a narrow historical lens focused on the last few decades). But I'll briefly highlight a few things that are important to me.

In my opinion, the Jewish people have a legitimate historical claim to the land of Israel. Jews had already been expelled and returned and expelled again a half dozen times before the rise of the Muslim and Arab rule of the Ottoman Empire. Of course it’s messy because we Jews and Arabs and Muslims are all cousins and descendents of the same Canaanites. But Arabs won the land centuries ago the same way Israel and Jews won it in the 20th century: Through conflict and war. The British defeated the Ottoman Empire and then came the Balfour Declaration, which amounted to the British granting the area to the Jewish people, a promise they’d later try to renege on — all before the wars that have defined the region since 1948.

That historical moment in the late 1940s was unique. After World War II, with many Arab and Muslim states already in existence, and after six million Jews were slaughtered, the global community felt it was important to grant the Jewish people a homeland. In a more logical or just world that homeland would have been in Europe as a kind of reparation for what the Nazis and others before them had done to the Jews, or perhaps in the Americas — like Alaska — or somewhere else. But the Jews wanted Israel, the British had taken to the Zionist movement, the British had conquered the Ottoman Empire which handed them control of the land, and America and Europe didn’t want the Jews. As a result, we got Israel.

The Arab states had already rejected a partitioned Israel repeatedly before World War II and rejected it again after the Holocaust and the end of the war. They did not want to give up even a little bit of their land to a bunch of Jewish interlopers who were granted it all of a sudden by British interlopers who had arrived a hundred years prior. Who could blame them? It had been centuries since Jews lived there in large numbers, and now they wanted to return in waves as secularized Europeans. Many of us would probably react the same way. So, just as humans have done forever, they fought. The many existing Arab states turned against the burgeoning new Jewish state. One side won and one side lost. This is the brutal and broken and violent world we live in, but it is what created the global world order we have now.

Are Israelis and British people "colonizers" because of this 20th century history? Sure. But that view flattens thousands of years of history and conflict, and the context of World War I and World War II. I don’t view Israelis and Brits as colonizers any more than the Assyrians or the Babylonians or the Romans or the Mongols or the Egyptians or the Ottomans who all battled over the same strip of land from as early as 800 years before Jesus’s time until now. The Jews who founded Israel just happened to have won the last big battle for it.

You can’t speak about this issue in a vacuum. You can't pretend that it wasn't just 60 years ago when Israel was surrounded on all sides by Arab states who wanted to wipe them off the face of the planet. Despite the balance of power shifting this century, that threat is still a reality. And you can't talk about that without remembering the only reason the Jews were in Israel in the first place was that they'd spent the previous centuries fleeing a bunch of Europeans who also wanted to wipe them off the face of the planet. And then Hitler showed up.

American partisans have a narrow view of this history, and an Americentric lens that is infuriating to witness. As Lee Fang perfectly put it, "Hamas would absolutely execute the ACAB lefties cheering on horrific violence against Israelis if they lived in Gaza & U.S. right-wingers blindly cheering on Israeli subjugation of Palestinians would rebel twice as violently if Americans were subjected to similar occupation."

And yet, many Americans only view modern Israel as the "powerful" one in this dynamic. Which is true — they obviously are. It isn't a fair fight and it hasn't been for decades because Israel's government is rich and resourceful, has the backing of the United States and most of Europe, and has an incredibly powerful military. At the same time, Israeli leadership has made technological and military advancements that have further tipped those scales — all while the Israeli government has helped create a resource-thin open air prison of two million Arabs in Gaza.

Conversely, Palestinians are devoid of any real unified leadership, and the Arab world is now divided on the issue of Palestine. Israel is unwilling to give the people in Gaza and the West Bank more than an inch of freedom to live. These are largely the refugees and descendents of the refugees of the 1948 and 1967 wars that Israel won. And you can't keep two million people in the condition that those in the Gaza strip live in and not expect events like this.

I'm sorry to say that while the blood on the ground is fresh. The Israelis who were killed in this attack largely have nothing to do with those conditions other than being born at a time when Israel and Jews have the upper hand in this conflict. Some of the victims weren’t even Israeli — they were just tourists. This is why we describe them as “innocent” and why Hamas has only reaffirmed that they are a brutal terror organization with this attack — an organization that I hope is quickly toppled, for the sake of both the Palestinian people and the Israelis. But as someone with a deep love for Israel, with friends in danger and people I know still missing, it breaks my heart to say it but I'm saying it again because it remains perhaps the most salient point of context in a tangled mess full of centuries of context:

You cannot keep two million people living in the conditions people in Gaza are living in and expect peace.

You can't. And you shouldn’t. Their environment is antithetical to the human condition. Violent rebellion is guaranteed. Guaranteed. As sure as the sun rising.

And the cycle of violence seems locked in to self-perpetuate, because both sides see a score to settle:

1) Israel has already responded with a vengeance, and they will continue to. Their desire for violence is not unlike Hamas’s — it’s just as much about blood for blood as any legitimate security measure. Israel will “have every right to respond with force." Toppling Hamas — a group, by the way, Israel erred in supporting — will now be the objective, and civilian death will be seen as necessary collateral damage. But Israel will also do a bunch of things they don't have a right to. They will flatten apartment buildings and kill civilians and children and many in the global community will probably cheer them on while they do it. They have already stopped the flow of water, electricity, and food to two million people, and killed dozens of civilians in their retaliatory bombings. We should never accept this, never lose sight that this horror is being inflicted on human beings. As the group B’Tselem said, “There is no justification for such crimes, whether they are committed as part of a struggle for freedom from oppression or cited as part of a war against terror.” I mourn for the innocents of Palestine just as I do for the innocents in Israel. As of late, many, many more have died on their side than Israel's. And many more Palestinians are likely to die in this spate of violence, too.

Unfortunately, most people in the West only pay attention to this story when Hamas or a Palestinian in Gaza or the West Bank commits an act of violence. Palestinian citizens die regularly at the hands of the Israeli military and their plight goes largely unnoticed until they respond with violence of their own. Israel had already killed an estimated 250 Palestinians, including 47 children, this year alone. And that is just in the West Bank.

2) Every single time Israel kills someone in the name of self-defense they create a handful of new radicalized extremists who will feel justified in wanting to take an Israeli life in retribution sometime in the future. Half of Gaza’s two million people are under the age of 19 — they know little besides Hamas rule (since 2006), Israeli occupation, blockades, and rockets falling from the sky. The suffering of these innocent children born into this reality is incomprehensible to me. They will suffer more now because of Hamas’s actions and Israel’s response, all through no fault of their own.

There is no way out of this pattern until one side exercises restraint or leaders on both sides find a new solution. Israelis will tell you that if Palestinians put their guns down then the war would end, but if Israel put their guns down they'd be wiped off the planet. I don't have a crystal ball and can’t tell you what is true. But what I am certain of is that every time Israel kills more innocents they engender more rage and hatred and recruit more Palestinians and Arabs to the cause against them. There is no disputing this.

So, why did this happen now?

I'm not sure how to answer that question except to say it was bound to happen eventually. It was a massive policy and intelligence failure and Netanyahu should pay the price politically — he is a failed leader. Iran probably helped organize the attack and the money freed up by the Biden administration's prisoner swap probably didn't help the situation, either. Israel's increasingly extremist government and settlers provoking Palestinians certainly didn't help. Nor has going to the Al-Aqsa mosque and desecrating it. Nor do blockades and bombings and indiscriminate subjugation of a whole people. Nor does refusing to talk to non-terrorist leaders in Palestine. Nor does illegally continuing to expand and steal what is left of Palestinian land, as many Jews and Israelis have been doing in the 21st century despite cries from the global community to stop. A violent response was predictable — in fact, plenty of people did predict it.

Israel is forever stuffing these people into tinier and tinier boxes with fewer and fewer resources. But if you want to blame Israeli leaders for continuing to expand and settle land that does not belong to them (as I do), then you should also spare some blame for Palestinian leaders for repeatedly not accepting a partitioned Israel during the 20th century that could have led to peace (as I do).

Please also remember this: Hamas is still an extremist group. The Palestinian people do not have a government or leaders who legitimately represent their interests, and it sure as hell isn't Hamas. Will some Palestinians cheer and clap at the dead, or spit on them as they are paraded through Gaza? Yes they will. And they have. Many will also mourn because they loathe Hamas and know this will only make things worse. This is no different than how some Americans cheer at the dead in every single war we've ever fought. It's no different than the Israelis who set up lawn chairs to watch their government bomb Palestine and cheer them on, too. This doesn't mean Palestinians or Israelis or Americans are evil — it means some of them are giving in to their violent impulses, and their zealous feelings of righteous vengeance.

Solutions, you ask? I can’t say I have any. If you came here for that, I’m sorry. The two-state solution looks dead to me. A three-state solution makes some sense but feels out of the view of all the people who matter and could make it happen. I wish a one-state solution felt realistic — a world of Israelis and Arabs and Muslims and Jews living side by side with equal rights, fully integrated and defused of their hate, is a version of Israel that I would adore. But it seems less and less realistic with every new act of violence.

Am I pro-Israel or pro-Palestine? I have no idea.

I'm pro-not-killing-civilians.

I'm pro-not-trapping-millions-of-people-in-open-air-prisons.

I'm pro-not-shooting-grandmas-in-the-back-of-the-head.

I'm pro-not-flattening-apartment-complexes.

I'm pro-not-raping-women-and-taking-hostages.

I'm pro-not-unjustly-imprisoning-people-without-due-process.

I'm pro-freedom and pro-peace and pro- all the things we never see in this conflict anymore.

Whatever this is, I want none of it.


12:26 PM · Oct 10, 2023 on Twitter”
That's a great summary and statement,however, he concludes that he does not have a solution. Personally,I can't see one either all the time Iran and it's proxy forces want to wipe Israel and the Jewish people off the map. Israel could and should rein in the settlers and improve how it treats the Palestinians via 'hearts and mind' campaign. But that is only playing around the edges.
 


Eeyore

Colonel Hee-Haw of Queen's Park
NSC Patron
Apr 5, 2014
25,859
Do you really see it as that simple?
Yes. I look at outcomes and refuse to follow media narratives. Last weekend innocent folk were murdered by militants. This week a whole nation has been placed in turmoil and denied the basics of life whilst 6,000 bombs (IDF figure) rained down upon them. The outcome is the same. There is no difference between the two actions. They are immoral, illegal, and cause immeasurable suffering.
 
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Wardy's twin

Well-known member
Oct 21, 2014
8,855
I fear the Israeli government are about to make a massive error of judgement.

I fail to see how the persecution of all Palestinians in Gaza is proportionate as a response, nor how it will lead to anything other than an escalation in violence. This is only going to bring in other players like Lebanon and Syria in tensions rise. Israel would still win, but at what geopolitical cost?
Lebanon is a divide state, one part of it is ruled by Hezbollah who have been skirmishing with Israel for 40 years. Israel has been regularly bombing Hezbollah in Syria , indeed Israel has provided support to some of the Sunni groups who are fighting the regime and might be deemed enemies of the west
 


PILTDOWN MAN

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Sep 15, 2004
19,587
Hurst Green
If Israel carry out their threat, I worry for Jewish communities all over the world. It doesn't need to be organised groups but individuals could cause horrific terrorist attacks on many of the Jewish. This could be the start of many attacks.
 


Wardy's twin

Well-known member
Oct 21, 2014
8,855
Yes. I look at outcomes and refuse to follow media narratives. Last weekend innocent folk were murdered by militants. This week a whole nation has been placed in turmoil and denied the basics of life whilst 6,000 bombs (IDF figure) and rained down upon them. The outcome is the same. There is no difference between the two actions. They are immoral, illegal, and cause immeasurable suffering.
Israel is at war, it declared war on Hamas as a result of the attack and murder of its citizens. It will do whatever it can to maximise it's destruction of Hamas. Why supply electricity to your enemy, why supply oil or food? Israel is trying to convince the Palestinians that Hamas is no good for them.
.
 




shingle

Well-known member
Jan 18, 2004
3,222
Lewes
Hamas are never going to give up the hostages under the threat of keeping the up the blockade. In fact, this ultimatum by Israel has played right into their hands. The desire by Hamas is to involve third parties into this conflict and Israeli air strikes on Gaza was never going to do it, especially after the atrocities committed by Hamas and the American statement telling others to keep out, but the sight of an already traumatised population dying through lack of medecines, hunger and thirst might just provoke Hezbollah and others to open up a new front. Add to the mix the vested interests of proxy powers and this could end up with the whole region on fire, it's a frightening prospect because there's no telling where it will end up.

I can't see it being over any time soon, but when it does come to an end the region won't be the same again.:down:
 




zefarelly

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 7, 2003
22,776
Sussex, by the sea
Nukes incoming for Hamas. If they're trying to ge them out of tunnel networks etc, its going to be some nasty chemical shit at the very least

f***ing lunatics are going to make this very nasty I reckon.
 








nicko31

Well-known member
Jan 7, 2010
18,545
Gods country fortnightly
Seems to be a woeful lack of anyone in leadership urging restaurant towards Israel.
Using the past 20 years as a guide they'll be looking to kill 1 million Palestinians before easing up.
The Norwegian government is one of the few in Europe with any at all....
 


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