Finally, it seems that Joe Biden is becoming a tad critical of the criminal Zionist Benjamin Netanyahu. Increasingly frustrated with him, the president no longer views Netanyahu as a partner who is open to solutions. Biden recently signaled his changing state of [his senile] mind by declaring Israel's response in Gaza was “over the top.”
Why did it take Biden so long to reach this conclusion is no mystery. The footage every day of the carnage perpetrated by the Jews against a defenseless Palestinian population caged inside the Gaza Strip is unbearable. Granted there are Hamas fighters blended in the population, but this is not Algeria, Vietnam or South Africa where rebels and resistors of a brutal occupation have the luxury of wide open spaces or jungles to fight from unpopulated areas. This is a Gaza, a Palestinian ghetto where a lightly armed guerilla beseieged by a Nazi-like army is fighting against the occupant. The fight in Gaza is not a war between two equally armed sides like, say Ukraine and Russia or the US and North Vietnam. This is not even a fair fight by any measure. It is the barbarity of a heavily armed monster with jets, tanks, missiles and drones against a self-made poorly armed militia that had to go under the ground due to lack of space. Israel is the illegal occupant of Palestinian land, and the Palestinians are its victims; how can anyone deny the Palestinians the right to defend themselves?
Sources say that Biden is saying things like, “A
lot of innocent people are starving ... A lot of innocent
people are in trouble and they’re dying. And it’s got to stop.” But there are serious doubts about how genuine Biden's turnaround is. For one, he watched the carnage for four months while refusing to back a ceasefire, and second, he has an election to fight and given his dwindling ratings among his own Democrat base, he is trying to rectify his hardline, blind and biased support for Israeli barbarity.
As Israel plans a ground invasion - in what looks like a Jewish Final Solution to the Palestinian question - of the Palestinian city of Rafah on the Egyptian border where upwards of 1.5 million Gazans are now crammed, the US and Egypt are increasingly fearful that Netanyahu might push all these people into Sinai, causing another Nakba (catastrophe) to the long suffering Palestinian people. After fleeing in a gradual north-to-south push by the Jewish Nazi terrorists, the Palestinians have nowhere now to go but in the Sinai.
“They’re already living in tents and not getting enough food and water and you’re saying go somewhere else,” an outside adviser to the White House told the Washington Post. “Where? How are they supposed to get there?”
Netanyahu continues to defend his warring posture which is his only salvation out of the political death awaiting him if he were to take a peaceful approach. “Those who say that under no circumstances should we enter Rafah are basically saying ‘lose the war,’” he said.
Secretary of State Antony Blinken was in Israel last week participating in negotiations for a ceasefire deal, but Netanyahu rejected an offer from Hamas to release the hostages and engage in a ceasefire, calling the deal “delusional.” “Continued military pressure is a necessary condition for the release of the hostages,” Netanyahu said.
Meanwhile, the killing of Palestinian children by Jews continues unabated. Israel’s military operations in Gaza since Oct. 7 have killed more than 28,000 Palestinians and injured upwards of 67,000. Over the weekend, Israel killed at least 44 Palestinians in Rafah alone, including more than a dozen children.
Even if Biden sharpens his rhetoric around the war, it will make little substantive difference as long as the U.S. is funding Israel’s military efforts, Ben Rhodes, former president Barack Obama’s deputy national security adviser, said in an interview. “So long as you are supporting Netanyahu’s military operation in Gaza without condition, it makes absolutely no difference how much you turn the dial in your comments. Fundamentally, you have to make a decision not to give Bibi a blank check of support,” Rhodes said, referring to Netanyahu as “Bibi,” a common nickname for the prime minister.
Stories of abject Jewish violence against the Palestinians are too many to recount. On January 29, the Palestinian emergency services received a call from a six-year old girl called Hind Rajab, who said she was trapped in a car with her family and a tank was rolling towards them. “Will you come and get me?” she asked. “I’m so scared.”
It took nearly two weeks for officials to reach the area, sealed off as an active combat zone, to find Hind dead along with several members of her family. Their car was riddled with bullets, suggesting a deliberate barbaric massacre perpetrated by the Jews on the entire family, including the six-year old Hind. Nearby were the burnt-out remains of an ambulance sent to help. This barbarity by far exceeds that of the October 7 attacks because it is perpetrated by what should be a regular professional army, not a raggedy resistance organization.
It is not by killing innocent people that Israel will restore its security and get its hostages back. Assuming Israeli Jews are civilized people, there must be another background scenario behind the atrocities: A deliberate will to kill as many Palestinians as possible, expel the majority remaining into neighboring Egypt, Jordan, Syria and Lebanon, and enslave the remainder as cheap enslaved labor. This is the modus operandi of the Zionists, these otherwise "civilized" colonial barbarians who are heirs to the barbarian colonial European countries.
The outcome of the carnage perpetrated by the Jews in Gaza is desperately uncertain. When you invade a territory of 2.3 million people crowded into 139 square miles, it’s easy to see why at least 25,000 will die. Also, the "democratic" Israel has barred all foreign journalists from entering Gaza so as to protect its barbarity. But Palestinian footage on social media shows houses, shops, mosques flattened; bodies crushed beneath rubble.
Now the West fears a refugee crisis, the collapse of the Abraham Accords and of the Camp David Accords, a major conflagration with the Lebanese Hezbollah and a potential regional war with Iran. Even Joe Biden, an otherwise dutiful ally, has described Israel’s response to October 7 as “over the top”.
Many Jewish voters blame Netanyahu for the security lapses that led to October 7. Though they are united in abhorrence of Hamas, nowhere is the ethical debate about what to do more intense than in Israel itself. One either lends enthusiastic support to Israel or Gaza, which gets you labelled a monster, or tries to be even-handed, which gets you labelled a coward. Hand-wringing Western liberals are accused of naiveté. This, we are told, is the reality of war.
Britain and America need to ask Netanyahu: what is the end goal of all this barbarity?
Netanyahu faces the long-term, unenviable choice between occupying Gaza, which means an indefinite insurgency, or imposing a Palestinian authority that would likely revert to extremism among a population radicalised by the latest Jewish violence in Gaza and the West Bank. Either way, it is increasingly clear that Netanyahu is dishonest and lacks the will to navigate the situation. He wants to swallow all of Palestine and is using the violence as a pretext to achieve that goal and survive his own demise.
Biden's visible decline and Trump's triumphant return spell even more disasters to come. Biden wasn't tough enough on the ISraelis from the beginning: His attempts now at reversing the course he chartered of blind support to his genocidal Jewish colony in Palestine are failing. His ratings are falling like Newton's apple from the tree, and the alternative is no better.
Brace yourselves everyone: We are entering into a world of untold violence, of a rampant catastrophe that will engulf the planet. Is there one country out there, especially in the Developing World, where people are not in the streets protesting corruption, stolen elections, rising cost of living, depletion of natural resources pushing millions to migrate, etc.? The backlash against liberalism and globalization has begun, and we are seeing a return of dictatorships and autocrats: This was the case during the 1920s and 1930s....
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