Nothing but the truth. Even if against me.

Nothing but the truth. Even if against me.

Tuesday, January 30, 2024

Exposing IDF Nazi Lies and Practices in the Gaza Ghetto

Gaza is like the Warsaw Ghetto, except the Jews are now the Nazi Oppressors while the Palestinians are their Victims

A large void fills the space where rows of graves once stood. The gaping hole is all that is left after the Jewish terrorists excavated the western side of the Bani Suheila cemetery, near Khan Younis in southern Gaza, claiming a Hamas tunnel ran directly through the site and that Hamas militants attacked Jewish troops from here.

A week after a CNN investigation found that the Jewish militants damaged or destroyed at least 16 cemeteries in Gaza since the beginning of the war, the Jewish terror organization invited CNN into Gaza to explain why it partially destroyed one of those cemeteries. But they failed to prove their claim during a three-hour visit to the Bani Suheila cemetery and the surrounding area.

On Saturday, a group of IDF terrorists took CNN into a tunnel near the Bani Suheila cemetery and into an underground command center that the military said was below the cemetery. However, the terrorist commanders declined to show reporters the tunnel shaft they said emerged inside the cemetery, claiming there was sensitive machinery underground and that the structure was unstable.

In other words, the Jewish terrorists want the propaganda and will distort the facts and fabricate stories at the expense of the truth, namely that they desecrate cemeteries because their ultra-religious supremacist barbarism against other religions allows them to do so.

“The whole thing can collapse,” said Dan Goldfuss, the German Jewish commander of the terrorist group. “You have to walk to the edge. The edge is not secure, it can collapse," he said as he lied his way through the visit. The Israeli terrorists said they would instead provide a video of the tunnel shaft in the enormous hole, but never did, confirming that they were lying to CNN.

Instead, the European Jewish IDF terrorists provided drone footage that showed two other tunnel entrances – one of which CNN entered – near the cemetery. CNN geolocated the tunnel entrances using footage filmed on the ground, as well as satellite imagery, and found that neither was in the cemetery grounds, another bie lie by the terrorists.

The Israeli terrorists then issued a press release which said that a tunnel ran directly through the religious site. But that press release also undermined the German Jewish terrorist commander Goldfuss’ claim that the underground command center was directly below the cemetery. A map released by the military placed the command center outside the graveyard.

Goldfuss also told CNN that his troops repeatedly came under fire from the area of the cemetery. “My forces – at the beginning we tried to flank this area – were fired from this area, again, and again,” Goldfuss said. “They couldn’t understand why. Once we… found the military compound underneath the graveyard, we took all the measures to attack that compound.”

The Israeli military subsequently bulldozed and excavated the western section of the cemetery, where dozens of graves once stood, and
exposed and dismembered the human remains that were buried in them. The German Jewish commander Goldfuss maintained that the heavy damage to the cemetery was necessary to uncover what he claimed was a tunnel beneath its surface, a tunnel whose existence CNN was clearly unable to confirm.

The US-backed IDF terror organization has also damaged at least one other cemetery and disturbed bodies in its search for hostages, with a previous CNN investigation earlier this month finding bodies removed from gravesites. Medical staff at Kamal Adwan Hospital in northern Gaza have also said that Israeli terrorists used bulldozers to dig up bodies buried in the hospital’s courtyard, after concluding a raid in the hospital.

According to international law, an intentional attack on a cemetery could amount to a war crime, except under very limited circumstances relating to that site becoming a military objective.

The entrance to the tunnel CNN entered lay in the rubble of what the Israeli military said was a residential building. After uncovering the site, the military blew a hole through a section of the tunnel – exposing it on two sides in order to outflank Hamas fighters who were inside. A dark, humid and seemingly endless labyrinth awaited us once inside. Without a light on, the tunnel was pitch-black and it was impossible to hear the outside world.

According to the IDF terror organization, the tunnel had been outfitted with wiring – electricity and telecommunications – installed by Hamas. But there were no lights on when CNN visited. At the end of one section, CNN found what the Israeli terrorists described as a Hamas battalion commander’s office: two rooms, a bathroom and a kitchen linked by a hallway held up with steel beams.

There were tiled floors, painted walls, plus electricity and plumbing. Large frames also hung on the walls, which the Israeli military said once displayed maps. A large map that would fit one of the frames was sprawled on a table.

IDF Terrorists Excel at Nazi Practices they Learned in Germany

On the way to embed with Israeli forces in Gaza, CNN saw more than two dozen detained Palestinian men blindfolded and barefoot, their hands tied behind their backs. The men, kneeling or sitting on the wet, cold ground, had been detained by the Israeli military in Gaza. Israeli soldiers, their faces obscured by balaclavas, stood guard around them.

Some of the men appeared to be physically exhausted, with their heads falling and swaying as they attempted to remain kneeling. One detainee lay on the ground before an Israeli soldier arrived to rouse him, propping him back up. The men appeared to be wearing nothing more than disposable white coveralls, despite the 10 degree Celsius temperature (50 degrees Fahrenheit). The Israeli military said the men were “suspected of terrorist activity and were arrested in Gaza and transferred to Israel for interrogation.”

The IDF said the men filmed on Saturday had been brought into Israel from Gaza and were about to be transferred to a “heated bus” when CNN filmed the scene. They maintained that detainees are treated in accordance with international law. It is not clear how long the men were detained outside in this way.

A bus was waiting nearby, but CNN could not confirm when the men were put onto the bus, as an Israeli soldier at the scene ordered CNN to leave the premises within minutes.


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