Friday 27 October 2023

Palestinian suffering and Israel's genocidal plan for Gaza did not begin on 7 October

Even after 75 years of systematic repression, Israel is now engaged in truly staggering levels of genocidal murder and removal of Palestinians, all backed by its Western patrons.     

As of 26 October, it has taken Israel just over two weeks to murder over 7000 people in Gaza, almost 3000 of them children. Another 940 children lie missing beneath the rubble. A truly astonishing and depraved kill rate. 


'Go south', they ordered 1 million people, 'for your own safety', then bombed them mercilessly there as well as in the north.


The death list of names grows by the day. Whole, extended families have been wiped out. Children shake with fear, utterly traumatised. This not just a humanitarian crisis. It's a genocidal annihilation.


Enumerating the drastic scale of death and destruction, Defence for Children International note the specific legal implications of Israel’s actions:

“Under international law, genocide is prohibited and constitutes the deliberate killing of a large number of people from a particular nation or ethnic group with the aim of destroying that nation or group, in whole or in part. Genocide can result from killing or by creating conditions of life that are so unbearable it brings about the group’s destruction.”

Yet, for all the notes of ‘humanitarian concern’ coming from Western states, Israel could bomb and murder any number of Palestinians anywhere and it would still make no difference to their unfailing endorsement of this savage regime. 


After decades, not just weeks, of this killing and blind-eye support, Palestinians and those who duly observe their suffering, have come to the same rational conclusion: Israel can slaughter with impunity. Palestinian deaths, in whatever circumstances, are deemed ‘unfortunate’, mere ’collateral’ results of an ‘intractable conflict’ and Israel's ultimate 'right to prevail'.  


How readily ‘our’ politicians and media use words like ‘inhuman’, ‘bestial’ and ‘evil’ to describe what Hamas forces did to Israelis. And how terrible much of that incursion was. But would you ever hear such adjectives being used to illustrate what’s being done to Palestinians? 


It’s quite remarkable how the process of Palestinian bodies being ripped apart by horrific bombs can be sanitised as ‘Israeli air raids/strikes’. Think of the language of outrage we see after the carnage of any terrorist attack. Yet somehow the calculated dropping of a bomb - Israel has now dropped thousands - on a packed residential apartment block in Gaza extinguishing all inside carries no such terminological equivalent. 


The entrenched racism underlying this selective language and treatment of 'other' peoples is a subject essentially unspoken of in 'mainstream' discussion. As we've seen with Ukraine, how different the jingoistic reactions and flag-flying support from western capitals and media to the deaths and displacement of white westerners.


The same callous Western response to Palestinian suffering is being orchestrated at the UN. After 17 days of relentless bombardment, a Security Council ceasefire proposal was vetoed by the US and UK

Despite having no legal binding, a later resolution from the UN General Assembly calling for an immediate ceasefire and emergency aid was overwhelmingly carried.


Rejecting global-wide public support for a ceasefire, Biden and Sunak have suggested instead a ‘humanitarian pause’. Again, such language only underscores the ruthless violence they’ve hitherto supported. As Craig Murray best summarised it:

“The great brainwave of US, EU and UK leaders is to call for not a ceasefire but a "humanitarian pause". This is to give small children a few sips of water before blasting them to pieces.”

Biden was also lauded for 'negotiating' the movement of aid trucks at the Rafah crossing, a paltry gesture while green-lighting the further massacre of children

UNICEF has called the mass casualties of children “a stain on our conscience.” More accurately, it's a huge blood stain on Israel and its international backers. 

Meanwhile, Israel has killed over 200 in the West Bank since 7 October, and arbitrarily arrested - effectively taken hostage - over 1360. 

Statistics on the UN's own losses in Gaza also make for grim reading. And, after killing 38 UNRWA staff, bombing 41 UNRWA facilities, refusing UNRWA emergency fuel and aid, and rejecting the UN ceasefire plea, Israel has now even refused visas to UN diplomats in response to this perfectly factual statement by UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres: 

“It is important to also recognise the attacks by Hamas did not happen in a vacuum. The Palestinian people have been subjected to 56 years of suffocating occupation.”

In essence, Palestinian suffering didn’t start on 7 October. But the attack on Guterres, and Israel's call for his resignation, for daring to say so, is deeply symptomatic of the Western narrative centred around Israel's 'primary suffering'.


Western hand-wringing and global solidarity


In stark rejection of their complicit Western governments, people across the West have joined millions more around the world in solidarity with the people of Gaza, and for all Palestinians, in saying that they are witness to their suffering, support their heroic resistance, and that they themselves won't be constrained or intimidated in defending the Palestinian cause. 


It’s also worth remembering, in that vital regard, the words of Desmond Tutu: “If you are neutral in situations of injustice, you have chosen the side of the oppressor.” And that message goes out especially to all those liberal-tortured figures and 'anti-racist' bodies who pander to the Israel-support lobby, their so-called ‘peace’ stalls, and all who serve to normalise Israel’s crimes.  


Alas, there’s no equivocation in the sides ‘our’ so-called leaders are taking. Israel's genocidal crimes in Gaza are being carried out with the full approval of its Western sponsors. As Sunak said to Netanyahu during his visit to the regime: "We want you to win.” He also said: “I know you are taking every precaution to avoid harming civilians.” That’s about as clear a statement of complicity to an internationally-defined crime that you can get. 


How telling that Sunak should arrive in Israel from the off-ramp of a military plane, rather than stepping down from a civilian one. Biden's and Sunak's support for the regime's bombing, invasion and collective punishment was also echoed by Von der Layen and the EU


Encouragingly, evidence of the clear violations being committed by all of Israel’s accomplices is being collated and actioned by international legal bodies:

“On Friday, 100 genocide scholars and Palestinian and international organizations wrote to International Criminal Court prosecutor Karim Khan, calling on him to “urgently issue arrest warrants” for cases related to Palestine already under investigation by his office. They also call on him to investigate ongoing crimes in Palestine and to issue a preventive statement that warns potential perpetrators of the consequences of their actions – measures Khan has so far failed to take.”

We should also be clear that Israel is not just committing war crimes, it is systematically using such actions as an erasure project, rather than a military objective. As Ali Abunimah writes:

“"Israel" is not "fighting a war" in which it is sometimes committing war crimes. It is waging a genocidal revenge and extermination campaign against a civilian population using war crimes and crimes against humanity as its main method. There is no "military purpose" to this barbarism.”

Again, the regime could not enact such violence on an entire people without the consistent assurances of Washington, London and the EU. 


Fittingly, Keir Starmer is also now feeling the full backlash of Labour party councillors, members and potential voters after giving his own open backing to Israel’s brutal and illegal actions, and refusing to back a ceasefire. Due political punishment surely beckons.  


Denial and lies


Israel's epic genocidal act requires an equally epic campaign of deception and lies. As Chris Hedges writes regarding Israel’s culture of deceit, the regime has taken the ‘kill, deny and lie’ stratagem to a whole new level. 


We’ve seen the repeated pattern played out by Israel's hasbara machine over decades of bombing, shooting and repression: as with the murder of Rachel Corrie - kill and deny; as with the esteemed Palestinian journalist Shireen Abu Akleh - murder and deny; and now with the wilful attack on Al-Ahli and so many other hospitals - bomb and deny - even when their claims are forensically analysedstrongly disputed and duly exposed. 


Amid the mass death and injuries, what kind of ‘civilised’ leader or state could support an entity that orders the evacuation and bombing of hospitals? Biden, Sunak, and Von der Leyen all have - the latter being a particularly rapacious voice for the regime. 


Yet, as Clare Daly reminds us, the vast crowds across European capitals turning out for Palestine shows that she doesn’t speak, as she arrogantly asserts, for Europe.


Besides all this political protection, Israel's denial and lies could not be disguised without the active collusion of a power-serving media. The same media will note their ‘concern’ over the ‘looming humanitarian crisis’, but still report Biden and his cohorts as 'honest brokers'. 


We've also seen these past weeks how the BBC has consistently peddled the message of Israel’s ‘right to defend itself’. Routinely, we're told that Israelis have been “killed”, while Palestinians have “subsequently died” (BBC News at Ten, 21 October 2023). 


In another such example, an admirable young Palestinian took a Sky reporter to task over the same ‘killed/died’ selectivity, and loaded framing. 


See also Palestinian Ambassador Husam Zomlot putting the BBC's Lyse Doucet right on the whole 7 October narrative.  


Of course, when the regime itself doesn't like what's being reported, it is only too ready to target the reporter, as in the deliberate killing of Al Jazeera journalist Wael Al-Dahdouh's family.

Existence and resistance


75 years of Palestinian suffering, from the Nakba catastrophe to the occupation and now this genocidal onslaught on Gaza, gets cursory attention, relegated to Israel’s own privileged history. 


People ask: 'Does Israel have a right to exist?' The plaintive answer to that lies in the returned question: 'Did apartheid South Africa have such a right to exist?'


Whatever the human carnage, the mass murder of children, the destruction of homes and infrastructure, it's Israel's 'history of homeland' that Palestinians are expected to see as sacrosanct. 


And now that 'history' is being abbreviated to a singular, 'iconic' moment, as though 7 October is the only landmark of any importance. So much of what passes for media ‘analysis’ insinuates the falsehood that all of the conflict started on this day. Thus, the hostility Guterres has encountered for stating a simple, historical and unalterable truth.


In repeatedly negating this key context, the BBC and other service media trot out the same unending mantra that Israel’s actions are in ‘response’ to the Hamas killings, and that Hamas is a banned terrorist organisation.  Again, where's the much longer timeframe of suffering, pre-Hamas, as intimated by Guterres? And why aren’t Hamas' own actions ever treated as a ‘response’ to the historic and relentless attacks on Gaza and Palestinians at large? Don't Palestinians have the right to exist and resist?


The answer to that lies in a more hidden truth: that this is not actually a ‘war to destroy Hamas’ at all, as peddled by the regime and regurgitated by the media: it's about the systematic erasure of all Palestinians, the continuous Nakba. 


And herein lies another telling message: that those who really do understand the processes of historical oppression and resistance are the first to be castigated for doing so.   


Guterres tried to make an essential historical point, and has been hounded for his honesty. The list of those who call out the regime are likewise smeared and demonised. Yet still they continue in resolute voice.   


Once again, as a prime example, Jeremy Corbyn finds himself on the right side of history, illustrating perfectly why the establishment wanted him banished and silenced. Note: he's still here and more vocally relevant than ever. 


We also find in admirable Jewish figures like Gabor Mate a voice of deep and traumatic experience, yet still unswerving in his concern for justice, and with the moral courage to call-out Israel's heinous historical crimes. 


We even see that historical understanding and empathy demonstrated by a certain set of admirable football fans showing their defiant resolve in flying the flag of resistance and telling Palestinians that 'they'll never walk alone'. Celtic fans’ courage here in resisting the intimidations of their club, UEFA and the establishment at large is a guiding lesson to all.


And we can be very certain in these dreadful, existential times for Palestinians themselves that they will never forget their own history or succumb to their oppression. 


We can, in turn, show our dutiful support and solidarity in many ways, such as demonstrating on the streets, but also in actively challenging the narrative of Israel’s 'historic supremacy' being peddled by its warmongering patrons and our war-stoking media. We can also refuse to countenance their contrived narratives of condemnation and blame.  


There can be no peace without justice. There can be no progress without recognising the very roots of the conflict. There can be no resolution of it until we address the real historical facts on the ground: that Israel is a racist-colonial entity, an apartheid state, and a genocidal regime now intent on enacting its despotic task of total elimination. Only with an end to the occupation, the apartheid system, and the brutal siege of Gaza could any real peace process even begin to germinate. 


This is an historic chapter in the suffering of Palestinians. But it's also an historic opportunity to help generate new mass awareness of all Palestinian history and their rightful claims.  


Yet, as Jonathan Cook shows, the regime itself also comprehends the importance of this crucial, historical moment:    

“Israel knows enough history to understand that occupied and oppressed peoples never come to accept their subjugation. They continue to find ways to resist. Even if Hamas can be wiped out, a new, more fearsome adversary will emerge among the next generation currently being traumatised by Israel’s bombs.”

Which is why the regime is now preparing to enact its own ‘historic solution’ in its push for complete dispossession and expulsion of Gaza's entire population to the wilderness of Sinai: 

“Netanyahu is aware that he has only a limited time-window to effect enough carnage to realise Israel’s plan.”

However broken, any such genocidal endeavour is likely to meet historic resistance from resilient Palestinians. 


As of this writing tonight, all internet connections have been cut to a blacked-out Gaza, as another terrifying bombardment is unleashed ahead of a possible all-out invasion.


All of our thoughts, solidarity and supportive intentions must be with the people of Gaza and all Palestinians in these dark and desperate times. 


 

Further reading


Media Lens: The ‘Absolute Right’ To Commit War Crimes? Gaza, Israel And Labour ‘Opposition’ 


Chris Hedges: Israel’s Culture of Deceit


Maureen Clare Murphy: Hospital massacre compounds Gaza’s nightmare


Jonathan Cook: Israel-Palestine war: Israel is caught lying time and again. And yet we never learn

Craig Murray: Genocide Unfolding 


Jonathan Cook: Did Israel choose to kill Hamas and the hostages indiscriminately?


Maureen Clare Murphy: Gaza tortured by Israel and US, not failed by “the world”





Monday 16 October 2023

Gaza: the relentless Nakba


The trauma of 1948 is being repeated in Gaza as Israel orders over 1 million people, half the illegally besieged enclave’s population, to leave. 

2.4 million people, half of them under 18, packed into an area the size of the Isle of Wight, now face further expulsion from their bomb-decimated homes. 


The Nakba catastrophe which saw 750,000 Palestinians forcibly removed from their land has been a continuous process of ethnic cleansing. And now millions more are facing the march of dispossession. 


80% of Gaza’s people are already refugees, forced from their homes in settler-taken towns like Sderot and Ashkelon across Israel’s ‘security’ fence.   


That’s why the people of Gaza rallied in their thousands during the Great March of Return in 2018, and were murdered en masse for their heroic efforts. 


As Aaron Mate charts, the extent of Palestinian resentment over their initial displacement was ‘recognised’ even by one of Israel’s most infamous generals, Moshe Dayan: 

“Let us not cast the blame on the murderers today. Why should we deplore their burning hatred for us? For eight years they have been sitting in the refugee camps in Gaza, and before their eyes we have been transforming the lands and villages, where they and their fathers dwelt, into our estate.”

Now they are being displaced once again in another act of brutal collective punishment, an order deemed illegal under international law, a breach of the Geneva Convention, condemned by the UN and rejected by every humanitarian agency in the world. 


As UNRWA's director of communications, Juliette Touma warns: 

“This is the worst we've ever seen. This is hitting rock bottom. This is Gaza being pushed into an abyss, there is tragedy unfolding as the world is watching. This is Gaza.”

UN Special Rapporteur to the Occupied Palestinian Territories, Francesca Albanese, states:

 “Mass forced displacement of Palestinians has occurred in 1947/49 and 1967, and continued ever since, in less visible but not less painful forms. This time it risks to be as cruel as ever, under our watch, with some member states even risking to enable it.”

Deprived of food, water and electricity, bombed and broken people now face the further traumatic prospect of never again seeing their territory, as the new horror of an invading Zionist army come again to kill, expel and annex. 


Israel's Defence Minister Yoav Gallant declared in his scorched-earth warning: “Gaza won’t return to what it was before. We will eliminate everything.”


We’re now seeing Israel’s long-gestating plan of banishing Gaza’s entire population to the Sinai Desert. “They need to move south, out to the Sinai Peninsula”, Israel’s army head Amir Avivi declares. 


In another chilling interview, ex-Israeli Deputy Foreign minister and senior diplomat Danny Avalon has revealed Israel’s pre-planned goal of expulsion to the Sinai, sealing the border and confiscating the land. 


As Mustafa Barghouthi clarifies: “Israel is fighting, not Hamas. Israel is fighting all the Palestinian people.”


Egypt’s own complicit part in this historic illegal transfer is also now emerging. 


And as the enforcement commences, Israel has rained down death and destruction on the south-heading evacuees.


It's also important to remember that, contrary to media references, Israel’s fence around Gaza is not a border. It has no legal status. It is a physical construct built by Israel to keep Palestinians locked in, controlled by air, land and sea. Israel thus remains the occupying power over Gaza. 


While desperate Gazans reach out to the world for basic aid, the West looks on in callous disregard. The US, Israel’s senior patron, flew in Antony Blinken, pledging to stand resolute with Netanyahu and his supremacist cohorts. EU head Ursula von der Leyen, still fuelling the military madness in Ukraine, has also promised unstinting support for the regime. And the UK - ever-cruel Britannia - is sending not relief ships to deliver vital aid, but warships off the coast of Gaza to mount surveillance on starving and fleeing Palestinians. 


The inhumanity of this war-diseased empire is truly breathtaking. How such a barbaric state still commands unequivocal US/UK/EU support tells us all we need to know about the 'moral standing' of Western ‘democracies’. 


This backing also now comes in the wake of an emergent far-right fascist government that’s been green-lighting pogroms and terror upon Palestinians across the West Bank. 


It continues despite Amnesty now joining other major human rights organisations in declaring Israel an apartheid state. 


And it intensifies now as Israel breaks every international law in the book in slaughtering and expelling the people of Gaza, clear acts of genocide, as specified by the UN. 


As Jonathan Cook cogently writes, “the blood of Gaza is on the West’s hands as much as Israel’s.


Shamefully, Labour leader Keir Starmer, a lawyer and former DPP, has refused to oppose Israel’s blocking of food, water and electricity to Gaza, a flagrant violation of international law. 

He has also ordered party officials not to attend any of the mass protest rallies in support of Palestine.


Is it possible for this shameless and alarming figure to sink any lower?  

Meanwhile, media platforms are awash with drum-beating Western ‘war analysts’, from state-funded ‘think tanks’ to retired generals, offering cold scenarios for Israel’s bombing and invasion.   


There’s no seeming alternative, they intone, other than ground forces to erase Hamas. Alas, they lament, the mass civilian casualties to follow will always be an 'inevitable consequence of war', and no more so than here in the prosecution of Israel's 'rightful retaliatory' war. 


Of course, there’s no such admission that deaths from the al-Qassam Brigade's own incursion into Israel could ever be linked to the decades of invasion inflicted on Gaza, or that those civilian losses could ever be viewed as a ‘sad and inevitable’ consequence of decades-long war being waged upon Palestinians. 


Nowhere from the mainstream political and media class is there the remotest call for Israel and its sponsors to seek an actual political solution, rather than pursue further catastrophic warfare. 


Nor will you ever read anything from Western service media on the actual complexities of Hamas’ own political and military development.


There's no discussion of it being cultivated by Israel from the late-1970s, and its particular promotion by Netanyahu from 1987, as a bulwark to Fatah. 


We hear nothing of the preemptive Hamas action against a US-backed coup following its democratic election in 2006, leading to the subsequent punishment siege from 2007.  


There’s no mention of the key political shift from its fundamentalist 1988 Charter to its more moderated one of 2017, notably its acceptance of two states.


There’s no explanation of the long-term hudna (ceasefire/truce) efforts pushed by Hamas in an effort to lift the siege.


There's no mention of the West's quiet back-channel to Hamas, via Qatar    


After so many failed Hamas initiatives and obstructions by Israel, there's no thought given to why its military wing took a more decisive shift to armed resistance.


All of which leaves no serious background context to the current Hamas operations. 


This should all be the stuff of studious political analysis and public interest reporting. Instead, the BBC choose to repeat ad nauseam the simplified Western framing of Hamas as a banned terrorist enemy. It's a carefully calibrated presentation, serving not just to demonise Hamas and dumb the public, but to brand Palestinians and anyone supporting the Palestinian cause as implicit supporters of it. 


This mendacious narrative is now being stoked by a growing state authoritarianism, with Home Secretary Suella Braverman not only castigating those demonstrating for Palestine, but even threatening prosecution of those waving a Palestinian flag. 

Palestinians, and those speaking up for them, are also being harangued by news anchors and interviewers demanding their immediate condemnation of Hamas. 


It’s the primary media opening: “do you condemn?” As though actual suffering Palestinians and their backers are expected to assume blame and express contrition; as if Palestinians and their followers have no such regard for human life. 


It further serves to normalise the lie that Israel is intent on only wiping out Hamas, rather than erasing all Palestinians. It's also, as Palestinian Ambassador/Head of Mission to the UK Husam Zomlot encountered, used as a crude media trope to portray the problem as one of internal Palestinian political divisions and their ‘refusal’ to acknowledge such. 


This is all bad faith interrogation, not rational explorative journalism. The first thing to be said in any such exchange should be, “I reject the premise of your question and the duplicitous motive behind it.”


One might also ask of such inquisitors: “have you ever thought of condemning your own state-serving media in turning a blind-eye to the West’s horrific crimes, including its long-time harbouring of Israel’s terror state?”


From its priority headlines to its tributing of Israel’s flag on public buildings, BBC reports are overwhelmingly loaded in favour of Israel. Israeli victims have highlighted names, extended stories, media empathy. Palestinians are numbers, ‘collateral’ losses, anonymous victims, their stories attenuated, their terrors reduced to 'anxieties'.


Public empathy for Palestinians is further undermined by loaded media language such as “Hamas-run” hospitals and other facilities.


BBC reporters will talk of Hamas massacres. But they will never speak about the bombing of Gaza apartments and the deliberate mass killing of civilians as Israeli massacres. The taking of civilians as hostages by Hamas is elevated as a crisis issue. In contrast, thousands of Palestinians, including hundreds of children, have been effectively abducted by Israel under Administrative Detention and locked away for years, with barely a murmur of media concern. 


The Guardian’s running order of ‘priority’ news and stories shows no better judgement. It has even fired its most esteemed cartoonist for caricaturing Netanyahu, killer of 3000 Palestinians.


Whatever images of bombed and suffering Gazans being aired - and how could the barbaric extent of it ever be truly hidden - the ‘predominant concerns’ still prevail: Israel’s own ‘fears’, ‘security’, fate of hostages, and ‘right to protect itself’. 


It’s a narrative laden with qualified sympathy for Palestinians: ‘yes, we see your suffering, but you must see the ‘greater imperative’of Israel’s ‘sole right to retaliate’ and act in its own ‘higher interests’. 


Armchair warriors and siren tabloid voices insist that, whatever the cost in human life, Gaza must be invaded, the need for Israeli revenge sated. To suggest otherwise is simply unthinkable. 


So how do Palestinians protect themselves? Where should they flee? Into the sea? Into the wilderness of Sinai? To these questions, there are no answers, practical or moral. All that matters is military execution of Israel's ‘superior’ aims.  


This is the Western hierarchy of suffering. And it’s coupled with the implicit requirement that Palestinian victims must condemn themselves in order to see the ‘problem’ of their ‘own making’. 


It’s all redolent of an ingrained colonial-imperialist mindset, speaking down to a ‘lesser’ people, the ‘other’, those who have dared to break out of their prison cage. 


If only the late, great Edward Said were still here to witness this chapter of the Palestinian catastrophe and deconstruct the media/cultural racism underlying it. 


How easy to condemn. How false to use it as harassment, entrapment and smear, as Palestinians like Zomlot, and Palestinian supporters like Jeremy Corbyn have had to endure.


This is the default line of warmongering Western leaders, posturing liberals and a public assaulted by the same moralising media propaganda. 


Real, honest and constructive condemnation is always underwritten by two further essential elements: the need to see and understand the core causes of why such violence and suffering occurs; and a sincere moral effort to use that understanding in an effort to help prevent further war, violence and suffering. 


In a textbook illustration of such, the honourable Israeli journalist Gideon Levy reminds us that it is Israel’s own relentless crimes against Palestinians and the brutal subjugation of Gaza that has brought about this desperate breakout, boiling point reaction, and, conveniently, the regime’s biggest ever pretext for wiping out Gaza. 

With the mass, indiscriminate bombing of every civilian and all infrastructure, Israel’s demonic Dahiya Doctrine is now being played out to full and hellish effect. 


As Israel readies to completely level Gaza and expel its entire population, all this criminal calamity is being excused by Western capitals and its amplifier media in the name of ‘righteous vengeance’. And as the violence-ridden post-9/11 world has shown, that only leads to more war, terror and death. 


While Palestinians resist in whatever ways they can, we can at least serve their cause by helping to expose this pernicious narrative: in calling-out the loaded, virtue-signalling politics of condemnation; in taking, without fear of further specious condemnation, the unequivocal side of the oppressed, not the oppressor; and in saying clearly that Palestinians who are responding with arms aren’t just doing so for the sake of it. 


Nothing happens in isolation. All the horrors we’re now witnessing are the direct consequence of Palestinian displacement, imprisonment, occupation and siege, the continuous Nakba. 


Tragically, there will be no end to the killing until true efforts are made to establish a system of equal political and civil rights under one state for all.


As this vital video of the Palestinian catastrophe and ongoing persecution shows, all serious condemnation should be informed by a need to understand the fundamental roots of the crisis, as the basis of any eventual and just resolution. 


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Further reading:


For those trying to comprehend the extent of UK and Western complicity, please see Jonathan Cook’s excellent analysis: Lawless on Gaza: why Britain and the West back Israel’s crimes.


Yanis Varoufakis has also compiled a specific list of internationally-defined war crimes committed by Israel since 7 October.