Volume 29, Number 81 — Friday, March 22, 2024
Biden’s Perplexed Policy Prolongs Gaza Genocide
The U.S. president is playing the deadly balancing act of privately demanding that the war stop, while openly funding the Israeli war machine, writes Ramzy Baroud.
Free Palestine protest at the White House on Nov. 4, 2023. (Diane Krauthamer, Flickr, CC BY-NC-SA 2.0)
By Ramzy Baroud
Z Network
When the foreign policy of a country as large and significant as the United States is governed by a case of cognitive dissonance, terrible things happen.
These terrible things are, in fact, already taking place in the Gaza Strip, where well over 100,000 people have been killed, wounded or are missing, and an outright famine is currently ravaging the displaced population.
From the start of the war on Oct. 7, the U.S. mishandled the situation, although recent reports indicate that Biden, despite his old age, has read the overall meaning of the Oct. 7 events correctly.
According to the Axios news website, on Oct. 8, Biden said during a meeting with special counsel, Robert Hur, [who was interviewing Biden about his handling of classified documents when he was vice president] that the “Israel thing” – Hamas attack and the Israeli war on Gaza – “has changed it all.”
By “change it all,” he was referring to how the outcome of these events combined will “determine what the next six, seven decades look like.”
Biden is not wrong. Indeed, everything that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his government and war council have done in Gaza point to a similar Israeli reading of the significance of the “world-altering” events.
Netanyahu has proven his willingness to carry out genocide and starve millions of Palestinians because he still feels that the superior firepower of the Israeli army is able to turn back the clock, and restore Israel’s military standing, geopolitical influence and global position.
He is wrong, and over five months of war and senseless killing continue to demonstrate this claim.
US Political Gamble
These terrible things are, in fact, already taking place in the Gaza Strip, where well over 100,000 people have been killed, wounded or are missing, and an outright famine is currently ravaging the displaced population.
From the start of the war on Oct. 7, the U.S. mishandled the situation, although recent reports indicate that Biden, despite his old age, has read the overall meaning of the Oct. 7 events correctly.
According to the Axios news website, on Oct. 8, Biden said during a meeting with special counsel, Robert Hur, [who was interviewing Biden about his handling of classified documents when he was vice president] that the “Israel thing” – Hamas attack and the Israeli war on Gaza – “has changed it all.”
By “change it all,” he was referring to how the outcome of these events combined will “determine what the next six, seven decades look like.”
Biden is not wrong. Indeed, everything that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his government and war council have done in Gaza point to a similar Israeli reading of the significance of the “world-altering” events.
Netanyahu has proven his willingness to carry out genocide and starve millions of Palestinians because he still feels that the superior firepower of the Israeli army is able to turn back the clock, and restore Israel’s military standing, geopolitical influence and global position.
He is wrong, and over five months of war and senseless killing continue to demonstrate this claim.
US Political Gamble
Biden calling Netanyahu on Oct. 17, 2023, ahead of his trip to Israel. (White House, Erin Scott)
But the American political gamble in the Middle East and the global repercussions of Washington’s self-defeating foreign policy makes far less sense.
Considering Washington’s historic support for Israel, the U.S.’ behavior in the early days of the war was hardly a surprise.
The U.S. quickly mobilized behind Netanyahu’s war cabinet, sent aircraft carriers to the eastern Mediterranean, indicating the U.S. is ready for a major regional conflict.
Media reports began speaking of U.S. military involvement, specifically through the Delta Force, although the Pentagon claimed that the 2,000 US soldiers were not deployed to fight in Gaza itself.
If it was not obvious that the U.S. was a direct partner in the war, U.S. mainstream media reports ended any doubt. On March 6, The Washington Post reported that “the United States has quietly approved and delivered more than 100 separate foreign military sales to Israel since the Gaza war began.”
With time, however, U.S. foreign policy regarding Gaza became even more perplexing.
Though in the early weeks of the war-turned-genocide, Biden questioned the death toll estimates produced by the Gaza Ministry of Health, the casualties count was no longer in doubt later on.
Asked on Feb. 29 about the number of women and children killed by Israel during the war, U.S. Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin answered without hesitation: “It’s over 25,000.”
Yet, the numbers are in constant growth, as well as U.S. shipments of weapons to Israel. “We continue to support Israel with their self-defense needs. That’s not going to change,” John Kirby, U.S. national security adviser, told ABC News on March 14.
This particular statement is worth a pause, since it came after many media leaks regarding Biden’s frustration, in fact, outright anger in the way that Netanyahu is handling the war.
ABC News reported in early February that Biden has been “venting his frustration” over his administration’s “inability to persuade Israel to change its military tactics in Gaza.” Netanyahu, the outlet quoted Biden as saying, is “giving him hell.”
Netanyahu in April 2021. (DoD, Jack Sanders)
This is consistent with other recent reports, including one by Politico, claiming that Biden has privately called the Israeli prime minister a “bad fucking guy,” also over his Gaza war stance.
Yet, Netanyahu remains emboldened to the extent that he appeared in a Fox News interview on March 11, openly speaking about “disagreements,” not only between Biden and Netanyahu’s governments, but between the U.S. president “and the entire Israeli people.”
It is glaringly obvious that, without continued U.S. military and other forms of support, Israel would have not been able to sustain its war on the Palestinians for more than a few weeks, thus sparing the lives of thousands of people.
Moreover, the U.S. has served as Israel’s vanguard against the vast majority of world governments who, daily, demand immediate and unconditional ceasefire in the Strip.
Israeli military during ground operations in the Gaza Strip on Nov. 1, 2023. (IDF Spokesperson’s Unit, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 3.0)
If it were not for repeated U.S. vetoes at the U.N. Security Council, a resolution demanding a ceasefire would have been surely passed.
Despite this unconditional support, the U.S. is struggling to stave off a wider regional conflict, which is already threatening its political standing in the Middle East.
Therefore, Biden wants to regain the initiative by renewing discussions — though without commitment to real action — about a two-state solution and the future of Gaza.
Netanyahu is not interested in these matters since his single greatest political achievement, from the viewpoint of his rightwing constituency, is that he has completely frozen any discussions on a political horizon in Palestine. For Netanyahu, losing the war means the unceremonious return to the old American political framework of the so-called peace process.
The embattled Israeli prime minister also knows that ending the war would constitute an end to his own government coalition, mostly sustained by far-right extremists like Itamar Ben-Gvir, minister of national security. and Bezalel Smotrich, minister of finance. To achieve these self-serving goals, the Israeli leader is willing to sustain a clearly losing war.
Though Biden has completely “lost faith in Netanyahu,” according to the Associated Press, he continues to support Israel without openly questioning the disastrous outcomes of the war, not just on the Palestinian people, but also on the region and the world, including his own country.
Americans, especially those in Biden’s Democratic Party, must continue to increase their pressure on their administration so that it resolves its cognitive dissonance in Palestine. Biden must not be allowed to play this deadly balancing act, privately demanding for the war to stop, while openly funding the Israeli war machine.
Though the majority of Americans already feel that way, Biden and his government are yet to receive the message. How many more Palestinians would have to die for Biden to hear the chants of the people, “Ceasefire now?”
There is no tenable ceasefire without the release of Israeli hostages.
ReplyDeleteUntil then you can cry Ah Chee Ah Chor as loud as you like, it won't stop the war.
Yaloh 30k+ dead Palestinians ain't tally for those hostages!
DeleteSleep tight, mfer.
"We are witnessing the international humiliation of America.
ReplyDelete- Ezra Cohen"
https://t.me/dotconnectinganons/129254
p/s
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ezra_Cohen
Ezra Cohen, also known as Ezra Cohen-Watnick, is an American intelligence official who served as the acting under secretary of defense for intelligence during the Trump Administration.
https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2017/07/ezra-cohen-watnick/534615/
The Man McMaster Couldn’t Fire
Thirty-one-year-old Ezra Cohen-Watnick holds the intelligence portfolio on the National Security Council—but almost everything about him is a mystery.
By Rosie Gray
https://www.politico.com/news/2021/01/19/qanon-trump-ezra-cohen-watnick-460520
‘Are you QAnon?’: One Trump official’s brush with an internet cult gone horribly wrong
Some believed he was “Q,” the mythical figure behind an intricate and sprawling conspiracy theory. Here Ezra Cohen-Watnick, a senior Trump intelligence official, shares the story of his ordeal for the first time.
https://youtu.be/ocyK73la5z8?si=E-98C7sTSeoTlKAY
The above video need to watch in conjuction with the following...
https://youtu.be/jzDUVFRXGsA?si=3zT23BcsTj9rF_HD
We'll find out...
ReplyDelete~~~~~
"Putin warned earlier:
"They call this decommunization. Do you want decommunization? Well, that suits us quite well. But there is no need, as they say, to stop halfway. We are ready to show you what real decommunization means for Ukraine.""
https://twitter.com/djuric_zlatko/status/1771161237558030425?t=3wDN0tot6HGWyNpjQlYcKQ&s=19
Graphic video of shooting in a theatre in Moscow.
ReplyDelete~~~~~
https://twitter.com/WarClandestine/status/1771255317751304672?t=Qt4DAQDECO9Njd9jY243Wg&s=19
⚠️GRAPHIC⚠️
The terrorist attack going down in Moscow is horrific.
I will refrain from drawing any conclusions until more details emerge, but it doesn’t look good.
Depending on who is found to be responsible for this attack… it could have global implications…
Developing.
https://twitter.com/Partisangirl/status/1771253716244398422?t=g8LBXwYLRDr3kTZBgOGHCg&s=19
ReplyDeleteBREAKING🚨one of the shooters and been arrested in Moscow concert.
12pm: Russia announces it will politically support Yemen
ReplyDelete8pm: ISIS attacks Russia
It’s so damn strange that ISIS keeps targeting US and Israeli enemies at precisely the moments that would strategically benefit the US. Weird, that.
https://twitter.com/ecomarxi/status/1771314644033872010?t=WA1H3utYnCnrePclM8iLww&s=19
Interesting way to connect the dots...~mf
In case you want to consider the following...
ReplyDelete~~~~~
https://twitter.com/BRICSinfo/status/1771318545785438609?t=GRFj3ZvWXqcGP6GWOFa9bw&s=19
ISIS has claimed responsibility for the terrorist attack in Moscow, Russia.
In 2016, Donald Trump said former US President Barack Obama is the founder of ISIS and Hillary Clinton is the co-founder.
Nice exchange rate.
ReplyDelete~~~~~
https://twitter.com/DarioCpx/status/1771081438797988220?t=d9OeLJlphp8Kw3V_2f9s2g&s=19
1 billion $USD per page, not bad 🤭
There is an accompanying photograph with the twit.~mf
ReplyDelete~~~~~
https://twitter.com/JackStr42679640/status/1771301017323446619?t=kaZmGTggHc6O4Dcq69OjDw&s=19
Blinken in Saudi Arabia. Guess what is missing behind him? The US flag.
Hope it will some insights into current affairs.
ReplyDeleteThe two points, mentioned by the guest, of JB fallback of type to his dead wife and son Beau, brought to mind, of what was discussed elsewhere by various, including anons and from other exposure in term of videos of other kind of incidents...
Seems to point to a man, under serious psychological stress or to a point of mental breakdown, emphasizing to his "oppressors" of what he had done, in secret, to the bargain table of whatever, in this case power and fortune, to those who he thoughts can offered him those that he desired. He, crying like a child, call to mind the times he had done his part of the bargain, during any secret initiation, and yet he had to faced this secret stuffs, now in public, maybe in the hope all these public scrutiny of his wrongdoings will go away just by recalling what he done.
Both, the story of his first wife, followed by relationship with Jill, his current wife, and that of his son Beau, were speculated upon by the anons.
Feel so much like all these were being deliberately exposed now for all to see, if anyone are willing to see.
~~~~~
https://youtu.be/_R0pwsLBT24?si=85grRu95uQcRuuXT