Showing posts with label Palestine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Palestine. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 13, 2025

Gaza Genocide: British Media Feeling Pressure Bends a Little


Richard Mellor

8-13-25

This video is from a week ago and is a report from Britain’s ITV. The fact that it shows the horrific scenes in Gaza, the destruction of the infrastructure, blowing up of hospitals and schools, and what is clearly a conscious starvation of the people, reflects the pressure that the Zionist regime’s allies are facing. 

 

Outside of the US, the UK and western European powers barring Ireland and Spain, Israel is seen as a pariah among nations by the rest of the world and its actions are recognized as a genocide, but western media outlets and many politicians adamantly reject the term. Israel is too valuable an ally as a European settler colony in this important oil rich region of the world.

 

However, some criticism of the content is warranted.

 

The western media continues to refer to this genocide as a “war”. It is not a war. There are not two equal sides here.  It is not simply a conflict either which is another attempt to obscure the truth. It is not Israel defending itself and it is not simply a response to an unprovoked attacked by Hamas on October 7th2023. Israel has been murdering, torturing and “cleansing” the region of Palestinian Arab life and culture since the nation’s creation by the UN in 1948.

 

What happened on October 7th 2023 was Palestinians in Gaza, what the vast majority of the world referred to as the world’s largest outdoor concentration camp, managed to break out of the camp and kill and capture some of their captors. Think for one serious minute, that outside this concentration camp, the occupiers were enjoying a rock concert that was within earshot of the incarcerated.  

 

Johnathan Cooke in his article today:

 

“Gaza has long been a prison that the Israeli military illegally controlled by land, sea and air, determining who could enter and leave. It kept Gaza’s economy throttled, and put the enclave’s population “on a diet” that saw rocketing malnourishment among its children long before the current starvation campaign.

Trapped behind a highly militarised fence since the early 1990s, unable to access their own coastal waters, and with Israeli drones constantly surveilling them and raining down death from the air, the people of Gaza viewed it more as a modernised concentration camp.”

 

He writes of October 7th“On 7 October 2023, thousands of Palestinian fighters briefly broke out of the besieged prison camp they and their families had endured after Israel momentarily dropped its guard.”

 

The Israeli hostages

ITV is a British based news outlet so it is likely still very much biased in its reporting on the Palestinian decades long struggle against the occupation and its violence, Apartheid and ethnic cleansing policies. So it is obligated to give time to the Israeli’s the Palestinian resistance captured when they broke out of Gaza. And as human beings, we should feel for them too. However, the Israeli government and especially Netanyahu, are not concerned one bit about the Israeli’s captured on October 7th.

 

But there is no mention of the Palestinian hostages, the thousands of them in Israeli prisons and torture centers, there is ample evidence of this yet they are never referred to as hostages in the western media. Palestinian children in the occupied territories are frequently rounded up and held hostage by the Zionist regime. Palestinian homes are destroyed, olive trees uprooted and their land stolen from them by right wing neo-fascist settlers all under the protection of the IDF. How is Israel defending itself there?

 

The entire world is against the US, Israel and its western backers of the genocide. But as long as Trump, like all the US presidents, and the US government continue to send the weapons and support the carnage with US taxpayer funds, the mass murder will continue.

Tuesday, August 12, 2025

Senior Hamas Official to Trump: We Are Ready to Make a Fair Deal

Thank you to Drop Site News for publishing this article and the authors for writing it.


Senior Hamas Official to Trump: We Are Ready to Make a Fair Deal

 

Trump should reject Netanyahu’s agenda, said Basem Naim, moving instead to end the Gaza genocide and support an independent Palestine: “It is not about Hamas."

JEREMY SCAHILL

 AND 

JAWA AHMAD

AUG 12, 2025

 

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Senior Hamas Official Basem Naim stands in front of a banner that depicts Jerusalem’s Al-Aqsa Mosque on February 8, 2025 (Photo by Ozan KOSE / AFP)


During the past three weeks, as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has overseen a significant escalation of Israeli terror bombings throughout Gaza and has announced plans for a full scale invasion of Gaza City, the prospects for a deal to end the genocide have been on life support. In late July, Israel withdrew its negotiating delegation from Qatar; the U.S. did the same, denouncing Hamas and mischaracterizing its response to a draft ceasefire framework. Now, the U.S., Qatar, and Egypt—as well as Turkey, behind the scenes—appear to be trying to restart the process.


The Trump administration reportedly wants to shift from negotiating phased “piecemeal deals” to one that would result in the freeing of all Israeli captives, living and dead, upon signing an agreement.


On Tuesday, multiple news outlets, citing Egyptian officials, reported that regional mediators were working with the U.S. to “revive” a 60-day ceasefire framework touted by U.S. President Donald Trump in early July as the “final” proposal for a deal. “The main objective is to return to the initial proposal for establishing a 60-day ceasefire, with the release of some hostages and some Palestinian detainees, and the flow of humanitarian and medical assistance to Gaza without restrictions, without conditions,” said Egyptian Foreign Minister Badr Abdel Atty during a press conference.


Netanyahu told i24 News he was not in favor of a partial ceasefire deal. “I think it’s behind us. In any case, that would leave many hostages in their hands, both living and dead. And we want them all, both living and dead. And that’s what we are going for,” he said Tuesday. “I am not telling you that I won’t be willing to discuss it. I want to bring them all back as part of ending the war. But on our terms of ending the war.” Nonetheless, Israel is reportedly considering sending a “high-level” negotiating team back to Doha to resume talks with mediators.


All of these discussions and media leaks about purported new and competing proposals are, to date, taking place without the direct participation of the only party that has the ability to make such deals: Hamas. “We are ready to go for a partial deal, or even for a comprehensive deal. But it is about the seriousness—how committed Israel is, and also the Americans—to reach a deal to end this war, but not to use negotiations as an umbrella for other evil plans,” said Basem Naim, a senior Hamas official and a former minister in the Palestinian government in Gaza.


We were trapped for 30 years in this so-called Oslo agreement to chase illusions,” Naim added, referring to the accords between the Palestine Liberation Organization and Israel in the 1990s that theoretically would have led to the establishment of a two-state arrangement requiring Palestinians to formally surrender huge parts of historic Palestine. “Israel was using this time to extend its settlements, to expel Palestinians out of their land, to undermine the existence of Palestinians, to take over Al Aqsa mosque. I think we are not ready to be part of such a dirty game again.”


Hamas announced on Tuesday that a delegation led by its top political leader Khalil Al-Hayya had arrived in Cairo to hold talks with Egyptian officials beginning on Wednesday. “The visit was requested by the [Egyptian] intelligence services and there is no specific agenda,” Naim said. “But there will certainly be discussions about the negotiations, the catastrophic humanitarian situation in Gaza, and the internal Palestinian situation.”


In a wide-ranging interview with Drop Site, Naim discussed the state of ceasefire negotiations, Hamas’s position on relinquishing power and its stance on disarmament of Palestinian resistance forces.


Naim said his message to Trump is that he should reject Netanyahu’s agenda of extermination and move to secure a deal that ends the Gaza genocide and leads to an independent Palestinian state. “It is not about Hamas. Even if, at some point, God forbid, if they reach a point to crush Hamas, sooner or later—a few months, a few years—they will have a new group of Palestinians who will stand up and fight back again,” he said. “Palestinians are fighting now for 100 years to achieve their legitimate goals of living like any people around the world, free and dignified, in their own independent, self sovereign state, to also preserve their right of return to their homeland.”


For more than two decades, Hamas has, on multiple occasions, offered Israel proposals for a long-term truce, known in Arabic as a hudna. Israel has rejected them all. Most recently, in late April, Hamas formally proposed a multi-year deal during which its forces would agree not to engage in any attacks against Israel. As part of the agreement, Hamas would immediately release all Israeli captives held in Gaza. The idea was that this arrangement would allow the space and security to negotiate an enduring political resolution. Israel once again rebuked the offer and continued to expand its military assault on Gaza.


Trump’s special envoy, Steve Witkoff, met last weekend with Qatar’s prime minister to discuss the U.S. preference for an “all or nothing” deal to end the war. On Monday, Trump referenced Netanyahu’s announced plan to escalate the military assault, including “taking over” Gaza City, and attempting to retrieve Israeli captives by force, telling Axios it would be "very rough to get them," because Hamas "are not going to let the hostages out in the current situation."


Though the Trump administration has indicated that it wants an omnibus deal to release all Israeli captives at once, in recent weeks it has not engaged with Hamas on any specifics. “This was our proposal three months ago, and they have rejected this,” Naim said. “We have no problem going back to this proposal as long as it is based on a long term road map, how to end this war and how to end this conflict.”


Naim reiterated that Hamas will not release any more Israeli captives outside of a deal that ensures a total end to the war and a withdrawal of Israeli forces from Gaza.

 

“The U.S. has given the Israelis all the time. They have given them all the support, political support, diplomatic support, financial support, military support, intelligence support, and the Israelis have failed to accomplish the mission,” Naim said. “They have failed to retrieve their soldiers or the captured Israelis. They have failed to crush the resistance. They have failed to force the evacuation of Palestinians. They have failed to create an alternative to Hamas, because it is clear it is not about Hamas, it is not about some prisoners. It is about people who want to live again, free and dignified, like any people around the world. Therefore, there's no alternative to a just and fair negotiating table.”


“I think there is a great political opportunity today,” Naim said. “President Trump, if he's serious about his promises during the campaign, he has a chance to do it once and forever.”


The alternative, Naim warned, is an escalation of violence, bloodshed, and instability that will extend far beyond Gaza. “By this unwavering support for Israel, they are destabilizing the region more and more and they will never achieve their goals of a new peaceful, prosperous Middle East,” Naim asserted. “The current leadership in Israel, which is to us a fascist and racist government, is converting this conflict from a political conflict about statehood, about borders, about people, into a religious conflict. And if this happens and we reach an irreversible point—if it becomes a religious conflict—there will be no chance for negotiations because then you are negotiating about beliefs and I think no one will compromise.”

 

Both Israel and the U.S. have stated that the demilitarization of the Palestinian resistance in the Gaza Strip would be required as part of any deal. Hamas has consistently stated that this is a red line, a point Naim emphasized. “No one can deny us the right to resist the occupation as long as we have the occupation here,” Naim said. “We are ready to hand over our weapons if we have a state and we are ready to engage to integrate our fighters in a Palestinian army. Why should Palestine be a disarmed state? Why? Who is the aggressor?”

 

“For 76 years, it was Israel,” he added. “Therefore, if someone has to ask for security or for any arrangements of protection, it's the Palestinians, it's not the Israelis.”

 

“We are ready to hand over the government”

On July 23, Hamas submitted a series of proposed amendments to the 60-day ceasefire framework drafted by the U.S., which Israel claimed to have agreed to. The movement had already offered a series of concessions embedded within the document and focused on securing three specific terms: that sufficient quantities of food, medicine, and other life essentials be allowed into Gaza and that the UN retake the lead in its distribution; that Israeli military forces withdraw entirely from the enclave, though Hamas said it would agree to a buffer zone encircling the Gaza Strip; and that, in exchange for releasing ten living Israeli captives, Israel would free 200 Palestinians serving life sentences and 2,000 Palestinians snatched from Gaza since October 7.


Israel, Naim said, has still not submitted an official response and instead announced it was withdrawing its negotiating team from the talks in Doha, Qatar.

“We are still in the negotiation process. We are waiting for the reply from the Israelis. They didn't, until now, reply. On the contrary, they have responded by announcing new plans to escalate. And I think this is very, very dangerous,” said Naim.


Trump told Axios that his position was that Hamas could not remain in power in Gaza, but said this was for Israel to decide. "I have one thing to say: Remember October 7, remember October 7,” Trump said.


As Drop Site has reported, Hamas has explicitly stated, in writing, that it would relinquish its governance of Gaza to an independent technocratic committee of Palestinians with no party affiliation. Each time Hamas has proposed this term as part of a ceasefire deal, Israel and the U.S. have removed this aspect from deal proposals and falsely accused Hamas of insisting on remaining in power.


Naim affirmed Hamas’s publicly stated pledge that it would give up power in Gaza and support a process that leads to a so-called two state solution along the borders of the pre-1967 Arab-Israeli war with east Jerusalem as the capital of an independent Palestine.


“The bottom line is to end the war, the total withdrawal of the Israeli forces from the Gaza Strip, an agreed ceasefire, opening the borders, allowing aid to enter the Gaza Strip, and the launching of a reconstruction operation,” Naim said. “We have said from day one we are ready to hand over the government, or the ruling of the Gaza Strip, to an independent technocratic Palestinian body.” Naim said this committee should work to reestablish coordination with Palestinian counterparts in the Ramallah-based administration in the occupied West Bank as part of an effort to formally unify the two territories, whose governance has been splintered since Hamas won the 2006 Palestinian legislative elections. Fatah, backed by the U.S. and other parties, aimed to marginalize Hamas as the elected party, deny its ability to form a government, and facilitated a civil war between Hamas and Fatah, with Hamas taking over the Gaza Strip and Fatah, under Abbas, becoming the governing authority in the West Bank.


On Tuesday, the Egyptian Foreign Minister confirmed that the proposal to administer Gaza involves a 15-member committee that would be supervised by the Ramallah-based Palestinian Authority for an initial period of six months. “We are talking about purely technocratic people who have no political affiliations,” said Naim, adding that a range of Palestinian political groups submitted suggested candidates to Egypt for review. “I hear that [the Egyptians] have also discussed this with the Israelis and the Americans, and there was a positive stance.” He added that none of the candidates have any connection to Hamas.


Naim contended that installing a non-partisan committee to administer the Strip would open a space to address the internal Palestinian political challenges, including the establishment of a new democratically-elected government. “We believe that there is a chance to rebuild, or to reform, the internal Palestinian situation by forming a unity government,” he said, adding that such an entity could organize new elections.


“Abbas is recognized internationally as a Palestinian president, but the last election when he was chosen as president is now more than 20 years ago. More than 60% of Palestinians haven't voted at all in their life,” Naim contended. “You cannot build a political solution based on a leadership which does not represent more than 5 to 10 percent of the Palestinians.”


“One of the core issues which has to be tackled and fixed is to give the Palestinians a chance to choose their leadership, to reform their political institutions and political system. And this can be done only by giving the Palestinians a chance to go for independent, free, democratic, transparent, fair elections,” Naim added. “We are ready to be part of, engaged in, or facilitating any serious political discussions to reach a political solution for this conflict that ends with an independent, sovereign Palestinian state.”

 

Saeed's story: shot by settlers while defending his West Bank home


Richard Mellor

8-12-25

 

I just watched this video from the UK’s Channel 4. It just angers me so much to watch it but I urge others to do so. We ned to watch It  because it’s important for us to at very least grasp the horrific situation that exists for the Palestinian people in the West Bank or what we also know as the occupied territories. Incidentally, it mirrors the events that led to the formation of the modern US nation state and the genocidal wars against the native population here.

 

Imagine having to deal with this, a condition that is completely illegal according to international law. This is what the US and British governments finance and support. The settlers come from the US, Europe, South Africa and other countries and claim the land was given to them by their god. This is not a serious argument for justifying colonial violence and theft. I don’t think Native American’s would fare very well using that argument to steal our homes here in the US.

 

This violent regime is strongly supported in the US Congress by Christian Zionists who base their actions on Biblical prophecy; billions of US taxpayer dollars are spent here that could be used to provide a better life at home and help others more productively abroad all as a consequence of obscure tracts written thousands of years ago by people or persons that knew next to nothing about the world around them when compared to where science and critical thought has brought us today.

 

It’s always fascinated me that these Christian nationalists and avid white supremacists have kidnapped a religious philosophy that is surely the most revolutionary of the three main Abrahamic religions. I am not a Christian nor do I have a great deal of knowledge when it comes to Christian theology but when I was young I was attracted to Jesus’ teachings by the compassion and humanity I saw in it. At the time, when I accepted there was a such a historical figure as Jesus and the events surrounding him despite very little evidence to show for it, I was drawn by the humble, forgiving, not materialistic portrayal of a person who stood up for the poor and disposed and scolded the rich and powerful. 

 

I saw the light by the time I reached puberty. But, as I have written in the past, some of the best fighters for the working class and for the oppressed against the oppressors I have known in my political experience were Christians  (and Jews) so people take from these philosophies and the writings what best suits them. 

 

Please watch this video and most importantly share it with friends whose opinions on this matter are blinded by sheer ignorance, or whose window to the world is framed by the extremely censored and biased mass media, particularly here in the US. And raise it with friends in conversation at dinner or work. You don’t have to go to war about it; if you do nothing else, challenge the mass media and the official narrative set out by those who have a vested interested in perpetuating this barbaric situation.

Wednesday, July 30, 2025

Anthony Aguilars Comments to Democracy Now.



Aguilar's comments were shared by Elizabeth Berry on Facebook 

 

Below are former US Green Beret, Anthony Aguilar's comments on Democracy Now describing US genocide in action. There are thousands of Americans that are complicit as IDF soldiers or simply supporters. The US government, or as Michael Beckley writing in Foreign Affairs Magazine refers to it, the "Rogue superpower" , is behind the genocide. The most vitriol is directed at the Israeli neo-Nazi regime which is justified but it is important to point out that this human catastrophe is Washington's project. Biden could have stopped the mass murder a long time ago. The tail does not wag the horse in this situation as some people are arguing. 

 

This situation in Gaza is not uncommon at all for US military ventures. Let us not forget Fallujah which will be a shrine forever for the Iraqi resistance to an illegal war waged on them by the US. The assault on Fallujah was punishment for the population taking revenge on US mercenaries they managed to get their hands on.The most prolific terrorist organization in the world is the CIA and its parent, US imperialism. A Aguilar reveals the hypocrisy and brutality of the phone US/Israel aid centre let's not forget the US dock built that last a month or so at a cost of around $500 million. I have a popular footbridge over the creek in my ton damaged by storm felled trees and we can't get that fixed.

 

Here are Aguilars's comments.

Richard Mellor

                                               ***************************


"What I witnessed in Gaza, I can only describe as a dystopian, post-apocalyptic wasteland. We — we, the United States — are complicit. We are involved, hand in hand, in the atrocities and the genocide that is currently undergoing in Gaza. For anyone who says that there is no starvation or mass hunger, or that not only are we at the precipice, but we have stepped over the line of wide-scale famine, to anyone who says that that’s not happening, shame on you. Shame on you. It’s inhumane.


What I witnessed in Gaza at all four distribution sites — I didn’t just go to one for a photo-op. I didn’t go to one to watch a distribution and then say, “Yes, this looks great.” I spent days on end in Gaza at all four distribution sites, at Kerem Shalom, where the aid is loaded for distribution, and at both operation centers that control the daily convoys, logistics operations and distribution for the four sites. What I saw on the sites, around the sites, to and from the sites, can be described as nothing but war crimes, crimes against humanity, violations of international law. This is not hyperbole. This is not platitudes or drama. This is the truth."


RAZOR WIRE WAS USED AT THESE SITES

The sites, not only where they were built, all four sites around the perimeter and the roads leading in and out are barricaded by razor wire — not barbed wire, not concertina wire that we use in warfare for obstacle obstruction or for paths. Razor wire. Geneva Conventions specifically prohibit the use of razor wire to restrict areas that civilians are servicing — hospitals, water points, food distribution points. And we’re using it. Not only did the IDF provide it for us to use it on the sites, we, UG Solutions, the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, asked for it specifically. Razor wire is designed to maim and kill, and we’re using that to channelize and herd, if you will, thousands of unarmed, starving civilians. That’s a war crime.


GHF EMPLOYEES WERE GIVEN AUTOMATIC WEAPONS TO DEFEND THEMSELVES AGAINST STARVING CIVILIANS 
The equipment, the equipment that we were issued, fully automatic weapons, which, in and of itself, is not a violation of protocol. However, we were issued M855 green-tipped ammunition. That’s important, because green-tipped ammunition is a steel-jacketed copper round that’s designed to — specifically designed to penetrate armor. It’s designed to kill. It’s designed to shoot through reinforced objects, to kill someone on the other side of it. That’s what all the UG Solutions contractors are equipped with right now in country. Everyone carries a standard basic load of 210 rounds of M855 armor-piercing military combat ammunition. Why would anyone need that, even if to defend themselves for their — defend their lives, against an unarmed population? It’s inappropriate. That, in and of itself, that action there, is a war crime.


SITE WERE DESIGNED TO LURE AND KILL, NOT TO MEET THE NEEDS OF A STARVING POPULATION.

The sites were designed to lure, bait, aid and kill. The food that we distribute, nowhere near enough. To Mr. Johnnie Moore, shame on you for celebrating 92 million meals delivered into Gaza. Shame on you. It’s a very simple equation: 92 divided by 2.2 million people, divided by 3 million — or, three meals a day. That’s what GHF proclaims. We’ve been distributing aid since the 26th of May, 26th May to now the 29th of June, 64 days of continuous distribution, and we’ve only managed to distribute 92 million meals. When you break that down, again, it’s a simple equation. That’s 14 days of meals. So, out of 64 days, we’ve provided 14 days of meals to the entire population in the enclave of Gaza. That’s inhumane. That would be like saying that you only eat every fourth day — you only eat on Thursday, and you only eat on Monday. And to say that that’s humanitarian? So, to anyone that says that that’s enough or — not even close to enough. The narrative of GHF needs help to do the rest, you don’t need help, because you’re not even anywhere close to where we need to be.