It's been like this for decades: What America preaches about around the world does not hold for Israel. All charters, laws, treaties, norms, resolutions, and regulations have been violated with total impunity by Israel.
Why? Because white anti-semitic America and Europe - the perpetrators of the Holocaust - have rid themselves of their Jewish "problem" by dumping it on Palestine and the Arab world. Hence, they are determined to continue colluding with the Israeli project of deporting most (since they keep some as a cheap labor minority) Palestinians out of their country, erasing Palestine from the map, and establishing their biblical-vintage, purely Jewish, supremacist colony. It began in the 1920s, continued throughout the 1930s and 1940s, with a first installement of ethnic cleansing in 1948, followed by another one in 1967, and now on the verge of completion in 2023. The Al-Aqsa Mosque will be demolished and a third Jewish temple erected in its place. Then the real Messiah will come in fulfillment of biblical garbage from the Bronze Age of humanity.
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America: Live Up to Your Own Principles When Dealing with Palestine
I have always believed and preached throughout the Middle East America’s principles of the rule of law, equality, freedom of expression, and the universality of human rights. I set up a media NGO, Community Media Network, that both trains and gives airtime on Radio al Balad and the AmmanNet website for journalists, youth, women, and marginalized groups to express themselves in an independent and professional way. CMN is the only media outlet in the entire Middle East and North Africa that has received the prestigious Journalism Trust Initiative stamp from Reporters Without Borders.
As an American Palestinian working in the Middle East and the proud executive director of the Palestinian version of Sesame Street, I have, in my years teaching at Al Quds University and as board chair of the investigative journalism group Arab Reporters for Investigative Journalism, trained and supervised many Palestinian and Arab journalists in the basics of professional journalism. I have proudly used the American First Amendment as an example of a masterful statement in defense of a core civil right.
This is why I am sad to report that I have seen every one of these principles shattered over the past week by American officials as they take Israel’s side so aggressively. Without necessarily cheering it on, they have been implicitly green-lighting acts of violence against Palestinian civilians and refraining, at least in public, from calling for de-escalation and the need to break the cycle of violence. These are not the ideals I have been preaching.
What we are seeing today coming from Washington is administration officials encouraging a four-times criminally charged prime minister whose defense minister publicly said they will cut off water, electricity, and food from an entire people. President Joe Biden’s visit to reassure Israelis is one thing, but his refusal to call for a de-escalation or a ceasefire (his U.N. representative vetoed such a resolution) has produced deep concern and an anti-American feeling throughout the region. Many worry that his visit and the continuing unreserved support for Israel he expressed in his Thursday night speech will give Israeli hawks the green light to continue brutalizing an already terrified civilian population that has no place to go.
While Palestinians, like all people under occupation, have an internationally legitimate right to resist their occupiers, the atrocities, whether by Palestinian fighters or others, are wrong, and they need to be called out and condemned. I add my voice without reservation in condemning war crimes against civilians. All humans are created in God’s image, and we are called by our maker to preserve life, not to end it.
Fairness and equality, however, require that everyone who has demanded the condemnation of acts by nonstate actors like Hamas must also be willing to demand the same from state actors.
Hamas committed war crimes, according to Amnesty International Secretary-General Agnès Callamard. But experts say that Israel’s blockade of Gaza and ordered evacuation violate international law as well. “Collective punishment is a war crime. Israel is doing that by cutting electricity, water, food, blocking aid from entering the Gaza Strip,” said Human Rights Watch’s Omar Shakir.
Even the “‘moderate”’ Israeli President Isaac Herzog has arrogantly said there are no innocent Palestinians thus denying Palestinian humanity and justifying killing noncombatants. “It is an entire nation out there that is responsible,” Herzog said during a press conference. “It is not true this rhetoric about civilians not being aware, not involved. It is absolutely not true. They could have risen. They could have fought against that evil regime which took over Gaza in a coup d’etat.”
Both Hamas are Israel are guilty of human rights violations, and everyone must be careful not to treat Palestinians as children of a lesser God. Human rights are inviolate, and all violators must be held accountable.
America cannot wash its hands of the Palestinian-Israeli conflict. When an American Palestinian journalist, Shireen Abu Akleh, was shot dead by Israeli soldiers in May 2022, the United States did little to bring the culprits to account. Shireen, who like me was born in the Biblical town of Bethlehem, had become a popular reporter because of her effort to convey the news as impartially as possible. Washington, with the exception of principled senators like Chris Van Hollen, who insisted on the investigation and accountability for Shireen, allowed the Israelis to get away literally with murder without even holding a proper investigation. This gave the world the signal that Israel will be treated differently even when it comes to the killing of an American journalist.
Another recent example of U.S. policy that Palestinians see as hypocritical but is probably little known to most Americans involves the decision by the Biden administration to allow Israel into the visa waiver program. This program, run by the Department of Homeland Security, permits most nationals of other nations to travel to the United States for 90 days without obtaining a visa. Israel had sought inclusion into this program for many years.
But the waiver comes with a catchall: Americans visiting participating countries must be granted reciprocity and treated with equal respect. Four Democratic senators warned that Israel was not meeting this condition. Haaretz recently reported on a Palestinian American man traveling in Israel with his children being blindfolded and handcuffed for 11 hours. An Arab American civil rights organization is suing over Israel’s inclusion.
My own family members have been caught up in this. They were among some Palestinian Americans who found themselves trapped and unable to get out of their homes in Jerusalem, while Jewish American settlers literally within meters of them were allowed free access to Israeli airports and crossing points. It was hard for my pregnant daughter, who had an extremely sick child, to be trapped like that. She chose to go back to the United States to give birth and ensure that her sick child was treated well.
Is it any wonder that Palestinians see the United States standing properly for its principles in Ukraine but see a blatant double standard when it comes to us?
Palestinian nonviolent efforts over the years have also been thwarted. My cousin, a nonviolent activist and Jerusalem native named Mubarak Awad, was deported by the Yitzhak Shamir government in 1996. I know the Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions movement is controversial in the United States, but it should not be. Boycott efforts are nonviolent. And yet, boycott efforts internationally are fought with false claims of boycott calls being antisemitic. Various U.S. states have passed anti-American laws (possibly violative of the First Amendment guarantees) that ban boycotts and punish those who support the BDS movement. This Palestinian civil society’s nonviolent response was inspired by the South African resistance to apartheid. There are many more instances of Palestinian attempts at nonviolence, including some of my heroes like Issa Amro from Hebron and Sami Awad from Bethlehem. They are regularly harassed by Jewish settlers and at times by Israeli security.
Peter Beinart has cited examples of nonviolence in a detailed article in The New York Times. Both political and nonviolent activities are restricted by Israel which has refused to deal with a 75-year-old refugee crisis it has caused, a 56-year occupation its troops are maintaining, and a 16-year unauthorized siege of Gaza. In the meantime, the Israeli army’s almost daily shooting of Palestinians and protecting Jewish settler pogroms have become unbearable including to many Israelis and American Jews.
Even attempting to follow the international legal remedies has failed to produce any tangible results. The United States has even opposed the International Criminal Court in the Hague from addressing legitimate documented Palestinian charges of apartheid and the illegal Jewish-only colonial settlement enterprise while speeding up cases against Russian crimes in Ukraine.
But for right now, the most urgent call is for the respect of the law of war as set out by international treaties and entrusted to the International Committee for the Red Cross and U.N. member states. The United States must call for an end to indiscriminate attacks (an Israeli army spokesman admitted that their attacks are aimed at damage not accuracy) avoid civilians and provide the provision of a humanitarian corridor. The Internationally banned white phosphorus should not be allowed to be used by Israel, as has been documented and condemned by Human Rights Watch. Hamas should be strongly encouraged to release noncombatant hostages immediately and to refrain from its own indiscriminate rockets even though over a thousand Palestinian civilians are held without charge or trial.
Once a ceasefire is reached, the sooner the better for saving lives and reasserting hope in international law, serious efforts must be exerted to find a political solution that can lead to the end of occupation and the creation of a democratic and independent Palestinian state alongside a safe Israel. In this regard, the U.S. president (whose rights in this area are exclusive) should instruct his representative at the U.N. not to oppose a call for recognizing Palestine as a full member of the U.N. with the goal of pushing representatives of the state of Palestine—President Mahmoud Abbas and his team—to negotiate with their Israeli counterparts on all issues of becoming good neighbors. There is no issue more in sync with America’s principles than that.
I wonder what kind of nation would the Palestinians build? Like the one in Syria? Just yesterday Syria’s dictator was exterminating his own people like bugs, and continues to do it as his father did, the only nation they’re allowed to build is one that’s an extension of the Iranian military front. Take a look at your former nation (Lebanon) for example what kind of nation is that? I call it hezbolastan, its main purpose is to create immigrants and provide a military front to the Islamic republic of Iran, also build mountains of garbage. Just yesterday they had an explosion of material (I argue is intended for hezbolah to manufacture weapons of terror) that killed and displaced so many citizens without accountability. It disgusts the kind of country Lebanon is evolving to, I believe it’s a couple of hundred to renounce the citizenship it’s laughable!
ReplyDeleteYou're right. But consider this: Between 1920 and 1970, Lebanon was a much better country than Israel ever was: liberal, democratic, diverse, multi-cultural, tolerant, unlike Israel which is based on religious bullshit from 3,000 years ago and is a racist Jewish supremacist colony pretending to be a democracy. Until Israel sent us the Palestinian refugees after it ethnically cleansed Palestine. Go back to 1920: Lebanon and Palestine were pretty much similar nations with similar institutions and civil society. They both were rising out from under 400 years of a brutal Turkish occupation. Under the French mandate, Lebanon built itself institutions and wrote a constitution and prospered with tolerance and division of power between its communities. In contrast, Palestine under the British mandate was denied self-determination, raped by foreign European Jews who wanted their own colony, and sold by the British crooks to rich atheist and communist Jewish settlers who proceeded to kill a third of the Palestinians, displace another third into refugee camps, and oppress the remaining third. Now, perhaps you can see that the Palestinian problem is all the result of the collusion between the crooks of the British empire and by Jewish foreign settlers. Had the Palestinians not been raped by Jewish Europeans, they, and Lebanon, Palestine probably would be just another normal Mediterranean country. The fundamental facts are: Israel is a foreign colonial implant in the Near East. It is built on biblical bullshit from 3,000 years ago. Europeans Christians committed the Holocaust, not Palestinians. So instead of asking me what kind of countries are Lebanon and Palestine, ask your own conscience: what have Israelis done to seek justice and fairness for the victims of their own rape of Palestine.
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