Israeli troops kill dozens of Palestinians in protests as US embassy opens in Jerusalem – live updat - Page 48 - Politics Forum.org | PoFo

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#14965164
skinster wrote: There were Israelis protesting in the street for more war in this last week. Israel is such a sick country.


Yes I agree. They only got a mere four hundred rockets and mortars shot at them and they are already angry.
Those Israelis should learn to take it on the chin and stop protesting when bombs fall on their houses and chuildren's schools. How dare they ask for security and war...
#14965259
Israel invaded Gaza and killed over a handful of Palestinians. The rockets came after and Israel knew they would, since it violated the ceasefire. As is always the case. Along with the rockets came Israeli air strikes bombing concentration camp Gaza, killed another 11 people. But zionists ITT act like the victims, as if it's about security when it's always about terror, that's how Israel was built on top of Palestine and that's what has been going on every day to the Palestinians, since their homes and land got stolen in the 1940s.

danholo wrote:What do you mean should? They already have, and still are. Palestinians have been fighting an imaginary foe ("thief") for decades, and then they complain when their violent campaigns are foiled time and again.


Imaginary? :lol:

I don't know why zionists try to pretend as though we're in the 90s. :D All the information is out there; Israel is a terrorist state.

Netanyahu’s ceasefire is meant to keep Gaza imprisoned
Palestinians in Gaza should have been able to breathe a sigh of relief last week, as precarious ceasefire talks survived a two-day-long, heavy exchange of strikes that threatened to unleash yet another large-scale military assault by Israel.

Late on Tuesday, after the most intense bout of violence in four years, Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Hamas, the Islamic movement that rules Gaza, approved a long-term truce brokered by Egypt.

Both are keen to avoid triggering an explosion of popular anger in Gaza, the consequences of which would be difficult to predict or contain.

The tiny enclave is on life support, having endured three devastating and sustained attacks by Israel, as well as a suffocating blockade, over the past decade. Thousands of homes are in ruins, the water supply is nearly undrinkable, electricity in short supply, and unemployment sky-high.

But as is so often the case, the enclave’s immediate fate rests in the hands of Israeli politicians desperate to cast themselves as Israel’s warmonger-in-chief and thereby reap an electoral dividend.

Elections now loom large after Avigdor Lieberman, Israel’s hawkish defense minister, resigned on Wednesday in the wake of the clashes. He accused Netanyahu of “capitulating to terror” in agreeing to the ceasefire.

Lieberman takes with him a handful of legislators, leaving the governing coalition with a razor-thin majority of one parliamentary seat. Rumors were rife over the weekend that another party, the ultra-nationalist Jewish Home, was on the brink of quitting the coalition.

In fact, Netanyahu recklessly triggered these events. He had smoothed the path to a truce earlier this month by easing the blockade. Fuel had been allowed into the enclave, as had $15 million in cash from Qatar to cover salaries owed to Gaza’s public-sector workers.

At this critical moment, Netanyahu agreed to a covert incursion by the Israeli army, deep into Gaza. When the soldiers were exposed, the ensuing firefight left seven Palestinians and an Israeli commander dead.

The two sides then upped the stakes: Hamas launched hundreds of rockets into Israel, while the Israeli military bombarded the enclave. The air strikes killed more than a dozen Palestinians.

Lieberman had reportedly expressed outrage over the transfer of Qatari money to Gaza, claiming it would be impossible to track how it was spent. The ceasefire proved the final straw.

Hamas leaders boasted that they had created a “political earthquake” with Lieberman’s resignation. But the shockwaves may not be so easily confined to Israel.

Strangely, Netanyahu now sounds like the most moderate voice in his cabinet. Fellow politicians are demanding Israel “restore its deterrence” – a euphemism for again laying waste to Gaza.

Naftali Bennett, the head of the settler Jewish Home party, denounced the ceasefire as “unacceptable” and demanded the vacant defense post.

There was flak, too, from Israel’s so-called left. The opposition Labour party leader Avi Gabbay called Netanyahu “weak,” while former prime minister Ehud Barak said he had “surrendered to Hamas under fire.”

Similar sentiments are shared by the public. Polls indicate 74 percent of Israelis favor a tougher approach.

Sderot, close to Gaza and targeted by rockets, erupted into angry protests. Placards bearing the slogan “Bibi Go Home” – using Netanyahu’s nickname – were evident for the first time in his party’s heartland.

With this kind of goading, an election in the offing, and corruption indictments hanging over his head, Netanyahu may find it difficult to resist raising the temperature in Gaza once again.

But he also has strong incentives to calm things down and shore up Hamas’s rule.

The suggestion by some commentators that Netanyahu has turned a new leaf as a “man of peace” could not be more misguided. What distinguishes Netanyahu from his cabinet is not his moderation, but that he has a cooler head than his far-right rivals.

He believes there are better ways than lashing out to achieve his core political aim: the undermining of the Palestinian national project. This was what he meant on Wednesday when he attacked critics for missing “the overall picture of Israel’s security”.

On a practical level, Netanyahu has listened to his generals, who warn that, if Israel provokes war with Hamas, it may find itself ill-equipped to cope with the fallout on two other fronts, in Lebanon and Syria.

But Netanyahu has still deeper concerns. As veteran Israeli military analyst Ben Caspit observed: “The only thing more dangerous to Netanyahu than getting tangled up in war is getting tangled up in peace.”

The Israeli army has responded to months of largely non-violent mass protests at Gaza’s perimeter fence by killing more than 170 Palestinian demonstrators and maiming thousands more.

The protests could turn into an uprising. Palestinians storming the fence that imprisons them is an eventuality the Israeli army is entirely unprepared for. Its only response would be to slaughter Palestinians en masse, or reoccupy Gaza directly.

Netanyahu would rather bolster Hamas, so it can keep a lid on the protests than face an international backlash and demands that he negotiate with the Palestinians.

Further, a ceasefire that keeps Hamas in power in Gaza also ensures that Mahmoud Abbas and his Palestinian Authority, based in the West Bank, can be kept out.

That was in part why Netanyahu, against his normal instincts, allowed the transfer of the Qatari money, which had been opposed by the Palestinian Authority. It is not just a fillip for Hamas, it is a slap in the face to Abbas.

A disunited Palestine, divided territorially and ideologically, is in no position to exert pressure on Netanyahu – either through Europe or the United Nations – to begin peace talks or concede Palestinian statehood.

That is all the more pressing, given that the White House insists that President Trump’s long-delayed peace plan will be unveiled within the next two months.

Leaks suggest that the U.S. may propose a separate “entity” in Gaza under Egyptian supervision and financed by Qatar. The ceasefire should be seen as a first step towards creating a pseudo-Palestinian state in Gaza along these lines.

Palestinians there are now caught between a rock and a hard place. Between vengeful hotheads such as Lieberman, who want more carnage in Gaza, and Netanyahu, who prefers to keep the Palestinians quiet and largely forgotten in their tiny prison.
https://mondoweiss.net/2018/11/netanyah ... mprisoned/
#14965707
https://www.rt.com/usa/444499-israel-co ... urnalists/

I wonder if the Australian consulate does this to Julian Assange?

Does any consulate of any other country act like this?

Seriously I'm asking for other examples.

I mean it's obviously some possibly Zionist staffer using their official account.
#14972707
skinster wrote:Who shoots defenceless children in the head? What kind of person supports this? :?:

No one would do this on purpose, but things like this happens when some decide to ignore the laws.
This was most likely an accident and I am sure the Israelis have a reasonable explanation. After all, the Israelis are the good guys.
#14976531
UN Report: Israel Murdered 295 Palestinians, Injured 29,000 in 2018
The United Nations Office for Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) documented the killing of 295 Palestinians, by Israeli forces, as well as the injuring of 29,000 Palestinians in 2018.

According to the new OCHA documentation, of the 295 Palestinians killed this year by Israeli forces, 57 have been children. A total of approximately 7,000 injuries were children.

Incidents of Illegal Settler violence, have increased by 69% since 2017, bringing the total number of violent attacks on Palestinians to 265 in 2018.

The number of injuries caused, as a result of settler violence, was 115. Around 7,900 trees and 540 vehicles sustained damage, as a result of illegal settler rampages.

The OHCA also recorded that Israel confiscated or demolished a total number of 459 buildings in the West Bank and East Jerusalem. As a result of home demolitions and confiscations, 472 Palestinians have been misplaced, including 216 children and 127 women.

Sixty-eight percent of Gaza have been described, by the OHCA, as food insecure in 2018. Approximately 59% of Gaza’s population are also unemployed due to lack of work, this figure climes to 69% amongst the youth.
https://21stcenturywire.com/2018/12/29/ ... mBwGqryVeA
#14976580
https://www.foxnews.com/world/american- ... d-to-a-jew
The ‘peaceful Palestinians’ sentence an American Palestinian with dual citizenship to life imprisonment with hard labor for attempting to sell property to a Jew.
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