Israel-Palestinian War 2023 - Page 177 - Politics Forum.org | PoFo

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#15311410
late wrote:The values that guided the formation of the country are what make peace possible.

“The values that guided the formation of the country”? How do you think nations are founded, @late? :eh:

It's how, with the help of a guy from Maine, Brits finally made peace with the Irish.

Great Britain was founded in 1707 by subjugating the Irish under the ‘Protestant Ascendancy’. The Brits finally made peace with the Irish by abandoning the values that guided the formation of our country. And rightly so.

Of course, all you see is mass murder.

That’s how nations are founded, @late.
#15311412
You're complicating things too much, @Potemkin. The fact is that the US did topple ISIS by force, even though that led to the deaths of thousands of civilians. @late is dishonest and pretends that's not exactly how ISIS was defeated.

Pants-of-dog wrote:Attacks against Israeli citizens do not contradict the claim of genocide of Palestinians.


No, those are contradicted by the facts.

But Hamas' attacks against Israeli civilians are certainly a problem, unless you're one of those who justifies their extermination.
#15311415
Pants-of-dog wrote:Elizabeth Warren has also described the Israeli military activities as genocide.

Is that the same Elizabeth Warren who had herself genetically tested in order to see what percentage of American Indian race she had in her genome and was disappointed to find out she wasn't as racially oppresssed as she had claimed.
#15311416
Potemkin wrote:
“The values that guided the formation of the country”? How do you think nations are founded, @late?




The way Brits finally made peace with the Irish is by working with them. It was long, and difficult, and expensive.

But it worked.

Of course, that assumes there is something to be considered that isn't ethnic cleansing.
#15311418
late wrote:The way Brits finally made peace with the Irish is by working with them. It was long, and difficult, and expensive.

But it worked.

Of course, that assumes there is something to be considered that isn't ethnic cleansing.

Nations are founded through ethnic cleansing, @late. Why should Israel be an exception? Hamas are also trying to found a Palestinian nation, and they too use mass murder and intend to use ethnic cleansing. And they are right. How else can they found their own nation? And how else could the Jews found their own nation? How do you think the nation of England was founded, @late? Did the Angles and the Saxons just politely ask the Romano-Celts if they had some spare attics or barns they could lodge in? And I’m not even going to mention how America was founded….
#15311427
Potemkin wrote: How do you think the nation of England was founded, @late? Did the Angles and the Saxons just politely ask the Romano-Celts if they had some spare attics or barns they could lodge in?.

Not disagreeing with the main thrust of your argument, that all our modern nations were formed with a total disregard for modern conceptions of human rights. But the Anglo-Saxon settlement of England (and parts of what is now southern Scotland) is still a rather puzzling event, which i don't think even now most archeologist would claim to fully understand.

Also Henry V made English the language of government again. But was it really the same language as that spoken by Alfred the Great. If Henry V and Alfred had been contemporous, would we really have considered them to be speaking the same language? What values do modern English people really share with Harold the Saxon? Or Henry V for that matter? What values does the Modern Scottish National Party share with Robert the Bruce?

At least we don't consider the English to be one of the First Nations of Britain. So why on earth does anyone call the Sioux or the Black Foot first nations of North America?
#15311443
Rich wrote:Is that the same Elizabeth Warren who had herself genetically tested in order to see what percentage of American Indian race she had in her genome and was disappointed to find out she wasn't as racially oppresssed as she had claimed.


I believe so, yes.

Potemkin wrote:Nations are founded through ethnic cleansing, @late. Why should Israel be an exception? Hamas are also trying to found a Palestinian nation, and they too use mass murder and intend to use ethnic cleansing. And they are right. How else can they found their own nation? And how else could the Jews found their own nation? How do you think the nation of England was founded, @late? Did the Angles and the Saxons just politely ask the Romano-Celts if they had some spare attics or barns they could lodge in? And I’m not even going to mention how America was founded….


Not all nations are founded through ethnic cleansing.

There are several post colonial Indigenous nations that (because they were on the business end of the colonial stick) never even had the opportunity to do any ethnic cleansing during their formation. Historical context did not allow for that.

Similarly, even if Hamas (or the PLO, or whoever) wanted to form a Palestinian state, they would not be able to do so through ethnic cleansing and genocide.
#15311446
https://edition.cnn.com/2024/04/09/midd ... index.html


Dying for a bag of flour: Videos and eyewitness accounts cast doubt on Israel’s timeline of deadly Gaza aid delivery

Jihad Abu Watfa was standing in the rubble along a dark stretch of coastal road southwest of Gaza City when he saw Israeli military tanks approaching. He began recording on his phone just as a heavy barrage of gunfire flashed before his eyes.

“We are now under siege, a tank is beside us and it’s shelling,” Abu Watfa could be heard saying in the video, which he shared with CNN.

The 27-year-old was surrounded by hundreds of other Palestinians who had gathered for an aid delivery on February 29 when Israeli soldiers accompanying the humanitarian convoy opened fire. More than 100 people were killed and 700 injured, according to Gaza’s health ministry.

The tragedy, which has become known among Palestinians as the “Flour Massacre,” is one of the single deadliest mass casualty events to take place in Gaza since Israel launched its assault on the strip following Hamas’ October 7 terror attack. It came after more than a month of Israel denying aid into Gaza City and northern Gaza and followed what the United Nations has called “a pattern of Israeli attacks” on civilians desperately seeking food, amid unprecedented levels of starvation.

CNN collected testimonies and videos from 22 eyewitnesses, many of whom had traveled from other cities across Gaza in the hopes of finding something for their families to eat. When the convoy passed through an Israeli checkpoint on Al Rashid Street, the main north-south route designated by the Israeli military for humanitarian aid, survivors recalled Israeli troops opening fire on crowds as they tried desperately to reach the food aid. Many said they were undeterred by the bullets, believing that if they weren’t killed attempting to get the flour, they would die of hunger instead.

Gazan and Israeli officials have provided conflicting accounts of what happened that night. Gazan health authorities said that scores of people had been killed in the gunfire and those injured were treated at hospitals for gunshot wounds, while the Israeli military said most people had been trampled to death in a “stampede” for the food aid or struck by the aid trucks driving away from the melee.

Mark Regev, the Israeli prime minister’s special adviser, initially told CNN that Israeli forces had not been involved. Rear Adm. Daniel Hagari, the Israel Defense Forces’ (IDF) spokesman, said soon after that soldiers had not fired directly on Palestinians seeking aid, but rather fired “warning shots” in the air.

On March 8, after an internal investigation, the IDF released a timeline suggesting that the aid convoy began to cross into northern Gaza accompanied by its tanks at 4:29 a.m. A minute later, at 4:30 a.m., the IDF said its troops fired “warning shots” toward the east to disperse crowds before firing at “suspects” who they claimed posed a threat. At 4:45 a.m., the military said it fired more warning shots.

But CNN’s analysis of dozens of videos from the night and testimonies from eyewitnesses’ casts doubt on Israel’s version of events. The evidence, reviewed by forensic and ballistic experts, indicated that automatic gunfire began before the IDF said the convoy had started crossing through the checkpoint and that shots were fired within close range of crowds that had gathered for food.

The IDF have not yet responded to CNN’s questions on these findings.

Shot at while trying to get food


Khader Al Za’anoun, a journalist in Gaza with the official Palestinian news agency, Wafa, told CNN at the time that the majority of the casualties occurred as a result of people being rammed by aid trucks as they tried to escape Israeli gunfire.

Al Za’anoun, who was at the scene and witnessed the incident, said the chaos and confusion that led to people being hit by the trucks only started once Israeli soldiers began shooting.

“Most of the people that were killed were rammed by the aid trucks during the chaos and while trying to escape the Israeli gunfire,” Al Za’anoun said.

The Israeli military released drone footage of the incident claiming it showed a stampede in which Palestinians were trampled and that the tanks were there to “secure the convoy,” but the quality and editing of the video make it difficult to confirm their claims.

The footage shows hundreds of people gathering around aid trucks on Al Rashid Street. Many people appear to be running and some crawling away, in an attempt to seek cover. But the crucial moment capturing what caused the crowd to scatter is missing. The video then cuts to show bodies on the ground – though it is not clear whether they are alive or dead – in a location geolocated by CNN near to the checkpoint.

Recorded using night-vision, the drone footage is the only available video that gives a clear view of the crowds. If nothing else, it shows just how difficult it would have been to fire with any degree of accuracy at what the IDF described as “suspects” among the tightly packed people surrounding the convoy.

The IDF has denied CNN’s requests for the full unedited drone footage from February 29.

All eyewitness videos obtained by CNN were recorded in darkness, so offer a limited view into what happened that night. But, drawing on their metadata, which includes the time they were filmed, the videos reveal an inconsistency with the IDF’s own account of when its troops started shooting.

Videos filmed in the hours before the deadly incident, between 2 a.m. and 3 a.m. and geolocated by CNN, show people gathered on the beach and roadside about 900 meters (just over half a mile) away from the checkpoint. Groups can be seen sitting around fires, while others walk around the beach. All appears calm.

Eyewitnesses told CNN that they had started to gather in anticipation of the arrival of food – aid convoys often travel at night to avoid being inundated by crowds en route – but that the trucks hadn’t even crossed the threshold of the checkpoint when Israeli tanks started shooting.

In a video recorded by eyewitness Belal Mortaja, which was shared directly with CNN, gunfire can be heard ringing out and people can be seen running away, urging others to flee, warning of a tank. The video was recorded at 4:22 a.m., seven minutes before the IDF said the convoy had crossed over into northern Gaza.

Abu Watfa, the 27-year-old, told CNN that he started filming just after he heard gunfire. The video’s metadata showed that it was recorded at 4:28 a.m., two minutes before the IDF said it fired warning shots.

Robert Maher, a gunfire acoustics expert at Montana State University in the United States, who analyzed the footage for CNN, said that the bursts indicated heavy automatic gunfire at 600 rounds per minute. That assessment was also corroborated by Richard Weir, senior researcher in the Crisis and Conflict division at Human Rights Watch (HRW).

Abu Watfa continued filming and at 4:30 a.m., the video shows a truck driving along the road, and tracer rounds traveling from the southwest, where Israeli tanks were located. One round is seen ricocheting up into the air.

In reference to the tracer rounds, Weir told CNN it was difficult to know where the projectile originated due to low-light conditions. However, the trajectory of the round was flat and appeared to be traveling toward the ground at less than 180 degrees before it ricocheted up into the air, he said.

“If the barrel of the weapon is angled downward and not horizontal or up, then the trajectory of the projectile will travel much more quickly towards the ground than it would from [a] normal bullet drop,” he added.

Another video from a separate location along Al Rashid Street, released by Al Jazeera, also shows horizontal tracer rounds, likely originating from the southwest, traveling left to right as a huge crowd gathers around the trucks. Gunfire is also audible.

Despite the gunfire, Abu Watfa said he was determined to get aid for his children and didn’t want to go away empty-handed.

“I was running amongst a thousand individuals; people were suddenly falling and being injured. The (IDF) were busy shooting. I ran towards the first truck, but I was unable to get anything from it,” he said, adding that he managed to push his way to the third truck and leave with a bag of flour.

“I took the bag of flour and left (at) the side of the truck, shooting was taking place around me and had intensified.”

The aftermath: ‘Blood mixed with aid’


As daylight broke, the aftermath of the shooting became visible. Videos showed dead bodies, some with wounds to their head and chest, scattered along the coast. People could be seen attending to the dead, placing them on top of a truck’s cargo bed, draped with blood-stained sheets.

CNN interviewed seven survivors who were treated for injuries in what was Gaza’s largest hospital, Al-Shifa. Among them was Jihad Abd Rabu, who had a bandage wrapped around his chest where he had been shot – a bullet had hit his left shoulder. He said that he was struck with gunfire in the early hours but had to wait until sunrise before anyone came to help.

Another survivor, Hamouda Zamil, told CNN that he was shot at after he was given a bag of flour from the convoy. “As soon as I carried the bag of flour and started to walk, they (the IDF) shot at me,” he said. “I started to ask people to help me, they (the people) left me.”

Dr. Amjad Aliwa, a physician at Al-Shifa, told CNN he had gone to Al Rashid Street to get food for his family, and witnessed people panicking when the Israeli military started firing. He said that people started to push each other to get to the trucks, with some being pushed in front of them, and in the chaos, he was shot in his left thigh. He said he quickly bandaged his leg before returning to the hospital to provide treatment for the many wounded who had been taken there.

Georgios Petropoulos, who heads the UN humanitarian coordination sub-office in Gaza, estimated that he saw at least 200 injured being treated, including for gunshot wounds but did not specify how many.

CNN traced some of the aid in the convoy to Ummah Welfare Trust, a Muslim relief and development charity based in Bolton, northern England. Among videos and photos of the aftermath, cardboard boxes emblazoned with the nonprofit’s logo could be seen scattered on the ground, splattered with blood.

“It came as a shock,” Mohammed Ahmed, a trustee, told CNN in an interview at the organization’s headquarters a few weeks after the deadly incident. “This is the first time in 20 years of working in this field, where I’ve actually seen blood mixed with aid.”

Ahmed said the charity had been successful in delivering aid to southern Gaza before, but this was the first time they had attempted to go to the north. “We were very, very excited and happy that finally we have gone through,” he said.

That joy was short-lived. Still, Ahmed said the tragedy would not deter the team from trying again because they have “no other choice.”

“People are either going to die from starvation, from the famine, from the desperate situation, or they will be killed by indiscriminate shooting or targeted killings,” he said.

As the United Nations agency for Palestinian refugees, UNRWA, says Israel is blocking it from making aid deliveries into northern Gaza and charities are increasingly filling that void, the February 29 attack raises serious questions about whether the Israeli military can facilitate the safe distribution of desperately needed assistance.

From January 25 to March 21, the UN Office for the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) documented reports of at least 26 attacks on civilians waiting for much-needed supplies at Al Nabulsi roundabout on Al Rashid Street and Al Kuwaiti roundabout on Salaheddin Street in Gaza City.

On February 26 – three days before the deadly incident on Al Rashid Street – videos shared with CNN by eyewitnesses showed heavy tank fire on Palestinian civilians gathered for an aid delivery along the same stretch, near the checkpoint.

In another video posted online on February 28 in the same area, a man can be seen carrying a bag of flour over his shoulder after a barrage of gunfire is heard followed by injured people being lifted from the scene on blankets. He turns to the person filming and says: “I have to die (for the flour), we must die in Gaza and feel humiliated for a bag of flour.”
#15311447
Rich wrote:Not disagreeing with the main thrust of your argument, that all our modern nations were formed with a total disregard for modern conceptions of human rights. But the Anglo-Saxon settlement of England (and parts of what is now southern Scotland) is still a rather puzzling event, which i don't think even now most archeologist would claim to fully understand.

Also Henry V made English the language of government again. But was it really the same language as that spoken by Alfred the Great. If Henry V and Alfred had been contemporous, would we really have considered them to be speaking the same language? What values do modern English people really share with Harold the Saxon? Or Henry V for that matter? What values does the Modern Scottish National Party share with Robert the Bruce?

At least we don't consider the English to be one of the First Nations of Britain. So why on earth does anyone call the Sioux or the Black Foot first nations of North America?


Everyone keeps dodging the obvious. The European rooted settlers were not in the Americas first. There were people in the Americas not from Europe already present.

Now if you believe that the ultimate goal of all clashes of interests between differing groups is bound to end in a Genocide? Then I would think that is not historically true Rich.

Some groups wound up living side by side and eventually intermarried so much that they wound up founding a fusion culture between them. So no...it is not about predatory practices.

The USA tried hard to negotiate with many Indian tribes....to avoid war. The problem became when that Indian culture had access to resources that were coveted by more powerful groups far from that area. Whether it be gold, diamonds, lumber, furs, farmland to grow crops, and petrol, etc.

And that is driven by capitalism and also paying debts to nations who were located in Europe and the entire setup is about paying the Royal families their due. Also, many tribes died off due to not having any resistance to European diseases like smallpox.

I think Tenotchitlan lost almost 90% of its original population not to the daring military adventures of 400 plus Spaniards and their horses and swords, but due to widespread diseases.
#15311448
Saeko wrote:https://edition.cnn.com/2024/04/09/middleeast/gaza-food-aid-convoy-deaths-eyewitness-intl-investigation-cmd/index.html


It is insane what is going on there. People fighting to get a bag of flour. It is shameful and disgusting behavior by those in power to stop this horrible situation.
#15311465
Tainari88 wrote:Now if you believe that the ultimate goal of all clashes of interests between differing groups is bound to end in a Genocide? Then I would think that is not historically true Rich.

I agree. All I'm saying is that wiping out a significant proportion of a people, in the past was not the moral taboo that people seem to think it should be in the present. This idea that all humans should have extensive human rights is a very modern one. Even if earlier Christians believed in some kind of universal value to human life they had now where near the same idea of rights as the UN professes to believe in.

Some groups wound up living side by side and eventually intermarried so much that they wound up founding a fusion culture between them. So no...it is not about predatory practices.

Indeed, even if you start with a pure raced based slavery, masters will have sex with their female slaves and pretty soon everything will become muddled and unclear. Really all this one drop nonsense was merely an attempt to manage a system that was totally unworkable in the long run.

I think Tenotchitlan lost almost 90% of its original population not to the daring military adventures of 400 plus Spaniards and their horses and swords, but due to widespread diseases.

Yes I think ultimately you're right if it hadn't been for their susceptibility to disease it would have ended like Africa, without Europeans being in control.
#15311466
Pants-of-dog wrote:Similarly, even if Hamas (or the PLO, or whoever) wanted to form a Palestinian state, they would not be able to do so through ethnic cleansing and genocide.


Their state would already be founded on that, given the ethnic cleansing of Hebron in 1929, of East Jerusalem in 1949 and what would likely be the expulsion of all Israeli settlers in the West Bank if the idea was to undo the settlements.
#15311468
So it is agreed that ethnic cleansing and/or genocide are not now a possibility for any militant Palestinian group. This is true even if atrocities occurred in the past. This is because those atrocities did not lead to overwhelming military power and control of the state.

Like I said, historical comtext matters.
#15311470
@wat0n

Do you agree or disagree that these atrocities did not lead to a situation where the Palestinians had the ability to conduct genocide today?

yes or no?
#15311472
Pants-of-dog wrote:@wat0n

Do you agree or disagree that these atrocities did not lead to a situation where the Palestinians had the ability to conduct genocide today?

yes or no?


They did not, not for lack of wanting just lack of competence.

Do you agree or disagree the Palestinians would expect to be fully separated from Israelis under any peace agreement i.e. all settlers would be evacuated whether they like it or not, regardless of their relations with Palestinians or any individual actions or opinions?
#15311474
Tainari88 wrote:Everyone keeps dodging the obvious. The European rooted settlers were not in the Americas first. There were people in the Americas not from Europe already present.

Now if you believe that the ultimate goal of all clashes of interests between differing groups is bound to end in a Genocide? Then I would think that is not historically true Rich.

Some groups wound up living side by side and eventually intermarried so much that they wound up founding a fusion culture between them. So no...it is not about predatory practices.

The USA tried hard to negotiate with many Indian tribes....to avoid war. The problem became when that Indian culture had access to resources that were coveted by more powerful groups far from that area. Whether it be gold, diamonds, lumber, furs, farmland to grow crops, and petrol, etc.

And that is driven by capitalism and also paying debts to nations who were located in Europe and the entire setup is about paying the Royal families their due. Also, many tribes died off due to not having any resistance to European diseases like smallpox.

I think Tenotchitlan lost almost 90% of its original population not to the daring military adventures of 400 plus Spaniards and their horses and swords, but due to widespread diseases.

It was smallpox which defeated the Aztecs, not Cortes. Just after Cortes and his adventurers were expelled from Tenochtitlan in the Night of Tears, smallpox ravaged the city and the surrounding countryside, killing about 90% of the population in a matter of weeks. This was the Black Death on steroids. Can you imagine it? And this was at a time when people considered disease a judgement of the gods, a divine punishment. Can you imagine how demoralised the few survivors must have felt? And even given this, Cortes was hard-pressed to win when he returned with thousands of native allies to take Tenochtitlan. The surviving Aztecs fought to the bitter end. Cortes had wanted to capture Tenochtitlan intact, but the heroic resistance of the few Aztecs who still lived forced him to destroy it street by street. No, it wasn’t the Spaniards who defeated the Aztecs, it was smallpox.
Last edited by Potemkin on 10 Apr 2024 02:27, edited 1 time in total.
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