Monday, 10 June 2024

Russian Sever Group of Forces Advances Into Depths of Ukrainian Defense in Kharkov Region

Russian Sever Group of Forces Advances Into Depths of Ukrainian Defense in Kharkov Region

Russian Sever Group of Forces Advances Into Depths of Ukrainian Defense in Kharkov Region





©Sputnik/Evgeny Biyatov/Go to the mediabank






Units of the Sever Group of Forces continue their advance into the depths of enemy defenses in the Kharkov region, the Ministry of Defense stated.







“Strikes were inflicted on the manpower and equipment of the 57th Motorized Infantry Brigade and the 125th Territorial Defense Brigade of the Armed Forces of Ukraine in the areas of Granov and Konstantinovka in the Kharkov region,” the statement said.


Over the past day, the group also repelled six counterattacks by the 42nd Mechanized, 71st Jaeger, and 82nd Air Assault Brigades of the Armed Forces of Ukraine, as well as the 13th Brigade of the Ukrainian National Guard.


In these battles, the Ukrainian army lost approximately 180 personnel killed and wounded, two armored combat vehicles, three other vehicles, a D-20 howitzer and two Bukovel-AD electronic warfare stations


In the meantime, Russia's Zapad group of forces have occupied more advantageous positions and repelled three attacks, while the Ukrainian military has lost up to 495 soldiers in clashes, the Russian Defense Ministry reported.


"Units of the Zapad group of forces occupied more advantageous positions, defeating formations of the 14th, 63rd, 116th mechanized brigades of the Ukrainian armed forces and the 117th air defense brigade near the settlements of Sinkovka and Petropavlovka in the Kharkov Region, Stelmakhovka and Dibrova in the Lugansk People's Republic," the ministry said. In addition, the Russian troops repelled three counterattacks by an enemy assault groups.


Ukraine has lost up to 495 military personnel, two US-made M113 armored personnel carriers, three vehicles, four US-made 155-mm М777 howitzer, a 152-mm D-20 howitzer and a 122-mm D-30 howitzer during clashes with Russia's Zapad group, the statement added.


In addition, Ukrainian troops lost up to 180 soldiers in battles with the Sever (North) grouping of Russian troops, over 400 in battles with the Yug grouping of troops, up to 340 with the Tsentr grouping of troops and up to 135 with the Vostok grouping of troops, as well as up to 50 military personnel and a UK-made Braveheart self-propelled artillery mount in battles with the Dnepr battlegroup.


Over the past day, the Russian air defense systems shot down a Ukrainian Mi-8 military helicopter, four ATACMS missiles, 71 drones and other targets, the statement added.


Meanwhile, Russia's Black Sea Fleet destroyed five Ukrainian unmanned boats during the same period.



Watch Russian FPV Drones Crush Ukrainian Militants Near Chasov Yar



The special military operation has revealed that drones and AI-powered UAVs are the future of warfare and Russia is working hard to get ahead of the game.






Russian airborne troops are actively using first-person view (FPV) drones in the special military operation. The footage provided by the Ministry of Defense shows these drones in combat action near the town of Chasov Yar.


The ministry stressed that FPV systems are easier to control compared to regular drones, and that they are quite instrumental in hitting moving targets and fortified positions. These drones can chase the enemy at a speed up to 100 km/h - leaving it no chance to escape.



Russia's North Group of Troops Eliminates Up to 225 Ukrainian Soldiers - MoD



Russia's Sever (North) group of troops hit four Ukrainian brigades in the Kharkov region and repulsed seven counterattacks over the past 24 hours, eliminating up to 225 soldiers, the Russian Defense Ministry said on Sunday.


"The enemy's losses amounted to up to 225 servicepeople, seven vehicles and a 152-mm D-20 howitzer. Three Ukrainian field ammunition depots were destroyed," the ministry said in a statement.


Meanwhile, the Zapad (West) group of Russian troops eliminated up to 400 Ukrainian servicepeople, one tank and two armored vehicles, the ministry said. The Tsentr (Center) group of troops repelled six counterattacks by Ukrainian assault groups, eliminating up to 300 soldiers, the ministry said.


At the same time, the Yug (South) group of troops destroyed up to 375 Ukrainian servicepeople, an ammunition depot and two armored vehicles, the ministry added. In the Kherson region, Kiev lost up to 25 servicepeople near the villages of Dudchany and Respublikanets.


The Vostok (East) group of troops eliminated up to 140 Ukrainian soldiers, the ministry added.





















German Authorities Try to Please US by Preparing to Conflict With Russia - Kremlin

German Authorities Try to Please US by Preparing to Conflict With Russia - Kremlin

German Authorities Try to Please US by Preparing to Conflict With Russia - Kremlin





©AP Photo/Kevin Lamarque/Pool






The statements made by the German authorities about preparing for war with Russia are related to the need to please Brussels, Washington and NATO, as Germany has been experiencing problems with its sovereignty since the end of World War II, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on Sunday.







German Defense Minister Boris Pistorius said the country must prepare for war by 2029 amid "increasing Russian threats."


"Germany has always had big problems after the World War II in terms of deficit of sovereignty and independence. And within the framework of this deficit, of course, the German authorities are racing against the clock — they have to please Brussels, the Washington Party Committee, and [NATO Secretary General Jens] Stoltenberg in NATO," Peskov told Russia media.


That is why their position is so complicated, Peskov said.


"Can you imagine them tearing up [between Brussels, NATO and Washington]?" he added. Meanwhile, Bundeswehr Deputy Inspector General Andreas Hoppe said Sunday that the German armed forces were planning to significantly increase the number of reservists in connection with the ongoing conflict in Ukraine.


"It is impossible without reserves. We see this in Ukraine ... We must adapt the reserve to the current challenges of security policy so that it can adequately support the Bundeswehr in carrying out tasks for the defense of the country and the alliance," Hoppe told the DPA news agency.


The goal is to build up the reserve to 60,000 people for basic purposes, who will be trained for clear tasks and included in the planning of future operations, the official said.


In addition, the Bundeswehr is currently considering how many people could potentially be drafted into the army "in case of defense," he said.


"We proceed from the fact that about 800,000 people can be drafted according to the laws of wartime. Basically, this is everyone who has ever served in the Bundeswehr, retired and is suitable for age," Hoppe said.


Western countries have been providing massive military and financial aid to Kiev since the start of Russia's military operation in Ukraine in February 2022. The Kremlin has consistently warned against continued arms deliveries to Kiev, saying it will lead to an escalation of the conflict.



Kremlin on Putin's Meeting With Foreign Journalists: Russia Needs to Explain Its Position



Western authorities are imposing censorship on their media while preparing for war and this can be seen "with the naked eye," but Russia has to continue to explain its position, Dmitry Peskov also said on Sunday.


On Wednesday, Russian President Vladimir Putin held a meeting with representatives of international news agencies on the sidelines of the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum.


"I am convinced that their editorial policy is not free in the full sense of the word. All the more so in the West, when they are in a state of preparation for war, for war with us, which they are talking about directly, they, entering into such, you know, pre-war ecstasy, begin to violate the interests of the media in a corresponding way, to put the media in a state of sub-censorship. And this is what is happening, this is what we see with the naked eye," Peskov told Russian media.


Even the most respected publications in the United States and the United Kingdom publish their materials "exactly as told," Peskov added.


"We have to try to explain our position. It's like riding a bike. You can't stop, you have to do it all the time. You have to pedal all the time," Peskov said when asked if there was any point in talking to Western media at this point.


All media representatives at the meeting agreed to meet with Putin once again, he said.


"They (media) are interested in this. A meeting with Putin these days is a big chance for any serious media outlet to get a first-hand assessment of what is going on," Peskov added.



‘Stop playing with fire’ on Ukraine – German left-wing icon (VIDEO)



Germany is helping to fan the flames of the Ukraine conflict by allowing Kiev to launch long-range strikes into Russia, veteran left-wing politician Sahra Wagenknecht has said.






Wagenknecht made the remarks at a rally in Berlin on Thursday ahead of European Parliament elections. The theme of the Ukraine conflict featured prominently at the demonstration, which was attended by hundreds of the politician’s supporters carrying banners bearing Wagenknecht’s face and the words “War or peace? It’s your choice now.”


The firebrand, who earlier this year split from the Left Party to form the Sahra Wagenknecht Alliance (BSW) – a party that is left-leaning on economic issues but closer to the far-right on several hot-button issues such as immigration – blasted German Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s government over its Ukraine policy.


Wagenknecht specifically protested Berlin’s decision to allow Ukraine to conduct long-range strikes into Russian territory. “What scares me the most [is] the great danger that the war in Ukraine will become a major European war… they are crossing one red line after the other,” she said, adding that the fact that Ukraine is allowed to shoot at Russia with German weapons is “crazy.”


She urged other Western countries to “stop playing with fire,” while repeating calls for a peaceful settlement of the conflict. “War does not end with weapons, war is ended with peace talks,” Wagenknecht said. “At some point… something will happen, and what happens will be so terrible that you don’t want to imagine it. That’s why we can only appeal to everyone who has responsibility in our country… we have to end the war in Ukraine and not keep escalating it; that’s madness.”


According to Bloomberg, BSW enjoys around 7% support in Germany ahead of the European Parliament election.


Last month, in a landmark U-turn on Berlin’s Ukraine policy, a spokesman for Chancellor Scholz said that Germany believes Kiev’s “defensive action is not limited to its own territory, but [can] also be expanded to the territory of the aggressor.”


Meanwhile, Russian President Vladimir Putin has warned the West that he regards support for Ukrainian strikes deep into Russian territory as a significant escalation that could spark an “asymmetric” response. He suggested that Russia could send long-range arms to regions of the world where they could be used against sensitive sites of the countries supporting Ukraine with such weapons.





















Sunday, 9 June 2024

Thousands gather outside White House to protest war in Gaza

Thousands gather outside White House to protest war in Gaza





Demonstrators hold up a red banner, representing a red line, near the White House on Saturday to protest the treatment of Palestinians by Israel. (Amanda Andrade-Rhoades for The Washington Post)






Thousands of people from cities across the country gathered outside the White House on Saturday to protest the Biden administration’s policies toward the Israel-Hamas war, many dressed in keffiyehs and red clothes to symbolize what they say is a red line that Israel crossed.







Thousands of protesters held a red banner that stretched around the White House, urging President Joe Biden to change his approach to the war in Gaza.


Thousands of demonstrators surrounded the perimeter of the White House in a sea of ' fabric Saturday, saying they were drawing a red line for President Biden and calling for a cease-fire in Gaza.


On the same day that Gazan officials said at least 210 Palestinians were killed in a refugee camp, the demonstrators — many of whom had arrived on buses from more than two dozen cities — marched to chants of “Free Palestine!” while holding signs that said “Genocide is our red line” and “Israel bombs, your taxes pay.” While marching, they held a seemingly unending strip of red fabric around the entire perimeter.






Biden said last month that he would suspend delivery of offensive weapons to Israel if it went into population centers in Rafah. But the White House has so far said Israel had not crossed Biden’s “red line” with its campaign there, infuriating Saturday’s demonstrators.


“If Joe Biden’s red line was a fiction … and it was designed to make us become quiet, instead of that, we are going to become louder,” said Brian Becker, a leader of the ANSWER Coalition, one of the organizers of the march. “Only we can be the red line against genocide.”


For Mohammad, a leader in the Palestinian Youth Movement who addressed the demonstrators before the march, it’s personal.


Pro-Palestinian activists hold up signs and chant on Pennsylvania Avenue in front of the White House during a demonstration protesting the war in Gaza on Saturday in Washington, D.C. Samuel Corum / Getty Images


His aunts and uncles are in Rafah, not far from where an Israeli strike killed dozens of people at a tent camp. His parents and other family are in North Gaza. He remembers the first call he got from his family members after the Oct. 7 Hamas attack that ignited the deadly war.


“They told me, ‘We go to sleep knowing we might not wake up in the morning. The sun rises and we hope Gaza is still there,’ " recalled Mohammad, who did not share his last name for safety reasons.


Palestinian authorities have estimated more than 36,000 civilians, many of them women and children, have been killed in Gaza since the start of the war, drawing escalating international condemnation. Those who were driven to join the march said they felt they could not be silent as civilian Palestinians and children continued to die, and as U.S. aid to Israel continued.


Many who came were students.


Aiya, a George Washington University student and a leader of GW Students for Justice in Palestine, said the student activism has “really lit a fire under the Free Palestine movement, because it has pushed the bounds of what we here in the United States and the diaspora are willing to sacrifice.” Before police shut it down last month, hundreds of GWU students set up a pro-Palestinian encampment — one of numerous throughout the country.


Demonstrators chant in front of the White House on Saturday. (Amanda Andrade-Rhoades for The Washington Post)


Aiya, who did not share a last name for privacy reasons, said students wanted Gazans to know they are “not alone.”


"We say at campus protests, ‘We will not rest till you divest,’ and we mean that. We have been out here tirelessly,” Aiya said. “I mean, how could we tire when we see the people of Gaza endure through literally hell on Earth?”


Shafi Goodwin, 36, a demonstrator who was holding the red line during the march, said he found the student activism at campuses nationwide “tremendously inspiring” — moving him to leave home in Durham, N.C., at 7:30 a.m. to get on a bus and join the protest in Washington.


"Seeing how the students experienced backlash for standing up for the innocent, it struck a deep nerve with me,” Goodwin said.


Many demonstrators expressed conflicted emotions or disillusionment about Biden and the presidential election. In states including Michigan and Minnesota, thousands of voters selected “uncommitted” in their vote for president in the Democratic primaries to send a message of disapproval to Biden.


“He chooses to keep silent to please Israel,” said Arianna Streeter-Floyd, who took a 20-hour bus ride from Des Moines to join the march.


A child examines a statue in Lafayette Park covered in pro-Palestinian graffiti near the White House on Saturday. (Amanda Andrade-Rhoades for The Washington Post)


Leo Delgiacco, 22, who came to the demonstration with her sister Jonna, said it was “discouraging knowing there’s no good option.”


“I’m not going to vote someone in who’s committing genocide,” added Jonna, 25. “I don’t want to pick one evil over another evil.”


A spokesperson for the White House did not respond to a request for comment in response to the messages demonstrators blared outside the executive mansion Saturday.


The demonstration and march remained largely peaceful. A D.C. police spokesperson said the agency had not made any arrests, while the U.S. Park Police did not respond to an inquiry on arrests.


Mohammad, the Palestinian Youth Movement leader, told the demonstrators he did not want them to feel their persistent activism has been “for naught,” noting how demonstrators have shut down streets and bridges throughout the country. Members of his family who have fled Gaza are asking, “When shall we go home? When can I return to Gaza, my dear Gaza?” he said.


Some of his relatives relocated to Rafah, only for Rafah to fall under Israeli assault, he said. He goes days without hearing from family members in Gaza as they lose internet and phone connections, he said, with many fearing they may not see tomorrow.


“We’re not ready for them to be gone,” he said.





















‘Nightmare at Al-Aqsa’ as hospitals cope with Nuseirat dead

‘Nightmare at Al-Aqsa’ as hospitals cope with Nuseirat dead

‘Nightmare at Al-Aqsa’ as hospitals cope with Nuseirat dead





Palestinians at the al-Aqsa Hospital in Deir al-Balah, in central Gaza, mourn relatives killed in the Israeli bombardment of the Gaza Strip on Saturday. (Ismael Abu Dayyah/The Associated Press)






"It's a nightmare at Al-Aqsa ... It’s way beyond what anyone could deal with in a functional hospital, let alone with the scarce resources we have here."







Gaza’s Government Media Office says the “Israeli massacre” at the Nuseirat refugee camp in central Gaza killed 210 Palestinians and wounded more than 400.


Doctors Without Borders (MSF) says Al-Aqsa Hospital in central Gaza is a “nightmare”, and Al-Aqsa and Nasser hospital are treating an “overwhelming number of severely injured patients, many of whom are women and children”, after the Israeli attack on Nuseirat.


Following intense bombings by Israel Terorists forces this morning in the Middle Area of Gaza, Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) teams are working alongside medical staff at Al-Aqsa and Nasser hospitals to treat an overwhelming number of severely injured patients, many of whom are women and children.


"It's a nightmare at Al-Aqsa,” said Samuel Johann, MSF coordinator in Gaza. “There have been back-to-back mass casualties as densely populated areas are bombed. It’s way beyond what anyone could deal with in a functional hospital, let alone with the scarce resources we have here. How many more men, women and children have to be killed before world leaders decide to put an end to this massacre?"



Chris Hook, MSF medical referent, sent a voice note from Gaza today:



"We heard earlier in the day of the attacks occurring further north in Deir al-Balah and Nuseirat, so the hospital had a little bit of pre-warning that we should expect some patients, but not entirely sure how many.


I think in the last hour or so, we've received, coming close now to about 50 badly injured patients. There are people with multiple major open fractures of their limbs. We've got several unconscious children who are trying to be escorted through CT scans and on to intensive care.


A few very bad burns have come through, and already four or five people who've required chest tube insertions, and things like this, for major injuries to the chest.


The (operatingl theaters are already running flat out. We have very limited resources, the emergency department was able to clear out as many people as possible that were already here, but there's a shortage of ability to perform CT scans. Patients have to go to another hospital.


We have very little painkillers available. In terms of things like morphine and ketamine, we're still having to ration those a little bit. The intensive care unit is now full already, and more patients are arriving. It's a serious mass casualty incident occurring right now.”



Another MSF medical referent, Karin Huster, also sent an update on the situation:



"Today is Saturday and I just came back from Al-Aqsa Hospital. Things started happening around 11:30 a.m., when there was a huge blast right next to our office ... And we started to hear really, really intense IDF activity, lots of bombardments, lots of shooting, helicopters ... As soon as we were able to, we three clinicians decided to prepare a bunch of supplies and medicines and go and support colleagues at Al-Aqsa Hospital. We had also heard by then the plea of the Al-Aqsa Hospital director to come and help. It just took some time to clear everything from a security standpoint.


Finally in the early afternoon, we entered Al-Aqsa Hospital’s emergency department. I have no idea how many dead there were. We had no time to take a look at the morgue ... It was, as usual, mayhem. But it was compounded mayhem from the last four days: total chaos inside; the entire emergency room, the red zone, the yellow zone, the green zone were completely packed with patients on the floor coming from the bombings in Nuseirat. There were hundreds of patients, and we did whatever we could to stabilize them, give them some IV fluids, put on a splint, bandage, try to refer for surgery for those who would benefit from that. And, thank God we were able to refer a bunch of patients to Nasser Hospital as well as IMC Field Hospital which is not far away from here.


Despite the fact that the place was completely overwhelmed, it did an amazing job. The nurses of the hospital, the Doctors Without Borders nurses and physicians that lent a hand, did an amazing job and continue to do an amazing job as we speak.


It is not difficult to imagine the horror that we saw. There were children everywhere, there were women, there were men. We had the gamut of war wounds, trauma wounds, from amputations to eviscerations to trauma, to TBIs (traumatic brain injuries), fractures, [and] obviously, big burns. And so, it was just survival for all of us rolling up our sleeves and putting fluids in people, giving them pain medicine and [sending] them to a place where they could get care.


Unfortunately, the system is so overwhelmed that a lot of patients are staying much longer than they should in this emergency department. Kids completely grey or white from the shock, burnt, screaming for their parents. Many of them [are] not screaming because they are in shock. Expectant patients mixed in the yellow area. It's just one of those moments when you don't think about the chaos that is happening: there is no system, there is no triage. You roll up your sleeves, you put a ton of stuff in your pockets, and you do the best you can.


But there is nothing, nothing at all that justifies what I saw today. Nothing. These children: the 3-month-old, the 7 year old, the 12 year old who died, the 25 year old man, the 78 year old woman who all have horrendous injuries. Why did they deserve this? And why is the world looking on in silence? To what level of horror do we need to go before we finally do something, before we finally tell Israel Terorists that this is not acceptable?"



In Photo : Overwhelmed Gaza hospitals treat wounded in tents




A man holds a Palestinian child at Al-Aqsa Hospital who was injured on Saturday when Israel launched simultaneous attacks on the Nuseirat refugee camp, Bureij refugee camp and Maghazi refugee camp [Ali Jadallah/Anadolu Images]



Injured Palestinians at al-Awda Hospital in central Gaza on Saturday as Israel launched attacks on Nuseirat and other refugee camps [Mohammed Saber/EPA]



The Ministry of Health in Gaza estimates that 210 people were killed in the Nuseirat attack and at least 400 were injured [Mohammed Saber/EPA-EFE]



[Mohammed Saber/EPA]



Doctors Without Borders, MSF, said that hospitals were treating an overwhelming number of people with severe injuries [Mohammed Saber/EPA-EFE]



Israel could have freed all captives ‘alive and intact’ months ago: UN expert



The UN’s special rapporteur on the human rights situation in the occupied Palestinian territory said the release of four Israeli captives held in Gaza did not need to come at the expense of hundreds of Palestinian lives, including women and children.


In a post on social media. Francesca Albanese said she was “relieved” for the four Israeli captives, but added that Israel “could have free all hostages, alive and intact, 8 months ago when the first ceasefire and hostage exchange was put on the table”.


“Israel refused in order to continue to destroy Gaza and the Palestinians as a people,” Albanese said.


“This genocidal intent turned into action,” she said.


“Israel has used hostages to legitimise killing, injuring, maiming, starving and traumatising Palestinians in Gaza.”





As Amal Nassar lay in pain on a bed at the Al-Awda Hospital in the Nuseirat refugee camp in northern Gaza, the echoes of explosions and artillery fire could be heard all around her. It was mid-January and she had made her way to the embattled hospital to give birth to a baby girl she would name Mira. While Amal should have been celebrating her infant’s delivery, instead she was engulfed in fear, surrounded by the relentless nightmare of death and suffering that she and her family had experienced for months.


“I was muttering to myself, ‘I hope I die,’” she recalled.


Though gut-wrenching, Amal’s story is not unlike those of so many other young mothers in Gaza today. The World Health Organization estimates that more than 50,000 pregnant women are barely surviving there, while having babies at the rate of 180 births a day. Many of those women (especially in the north) are acutely malnourished and few received any medical attention before their labor pains began, often weeks ahead of schedule.



The damage done



The specter of death in Gaza is difficult, if not impossible, to grasp. At a distance, our understanding of the situation often relies on somber statistics, especially in the establishment media. The official count, consistently cited by mainstream outlets, comes in at around 35,000 deaths.


In May, the New York Times and other outlets jumped on a report from the United Nations, which had apparently revised Gaza’s death count. But the U.N. did not, in fact, halve its total of women and children who had died, as the Jerusalem Post claimed. It simply altered its classification system in terms of those estimated to have died and those it could definitively confirm to be deceased. The totals, however, remained the same. Nonetheless, even those numbers, based on information provided by Gaza’s Ministry of Health, end up blurring the cruel reality on the ground. U.N. officials also fear that at least 10,000 more Gazans lie buried under the rubble in that 25-mile strip of land.


But death figures can also impart meaning, as the long-time consumer-rights activist Ralph Nader recently pointed out. He happens to believe that Israel Terorists could have killed at least 200,000 Palestinians in Gaza, a mind-boggling figure, but worth examining. So, I called on him to elaborate.


“The undercount is staggering,” said Nader, whose Lebanese parents emigrated to the United States before he was born. “The U.S. and Israel Terorists want a low number, so they look around. Instead of themselves estimating — which they don’t want to do — they cling to Hamas’s [figures], and Hamas doesn’t want a realistic number because they don’t want to be seen as unable to protect their own people. So, they developed these criteria: to be counted, the dead must first be certified by hospitals and morgues [which barely exist].”


He has made it a habit to reach out to writers and editors. Like so many others, I have a bit of a phone affair with that 90-year-old thinker and activist. We discuss politics, baseball, and journalism’s rapid, insidious decline. I’ve certainly heard him animated in the past, but never more indignant than when he addresses the situation in Gaza. “The whole thing is one death camp now. It’s easily 200,000 deaths in Gaza,” he insisted, citing the number of bombs dropped, which have, by some estimates, exceeded 100,000. We know that at least 45,000 missiles and bombs had been used in Gaza within three months of the beginning of Israel Terorists’s military campaign. As a result, as many as 175,000 buildings have been damaged or destroyed by Israel. So, he seems to be on to something.


“Eventually [the real number of the dead] will come out,” he adds. “They’ll do a census, whoever takes over. The one thing the extended families in Gaza know is who’s been killed in their families.”


Of course, his assertion is circumstantial and he knows it, but he’s making a point. With so much of the Gaza Strip facing imminent starvation, nearly all hospitals out of commission, just about no medicine left, and very little clean water or food, 35,000 deaths are likely, in the end, to prove a drastic undercount.



“Not in our name”



The Holocaust, in which Nazis murdered 11 million people, six million of whom were Jews, was quite literally the textbook genocide. Yet, as ghastly and systematic as it was, at least one other genocide may have claimed a larger death toll. In her latest book, Doppelganger, Naomi Klein explains that the largest genocide was inflicted on Indigenous peoples in the Americas at the hands of European settlers. Hitler’s Holocaust, Klein writes, actually took a page from colonialists in the Americas and was deeply influenced by the Western frontier myth.


“I think it is important to say that every genocide is different,” was how Klein put it to Arielle Angel of the Jewish Currents podcast On the Nose. “There are particularities to every holocaust, and there absolutely were particularities to the Nazi Holocaust. This was a Fordist Holocaust. It was quicker and on a much larger scale and more industrialized than had ever been seen before or since.”


Klein is correct that the Nazi Holocaust was born out of Hitler’s colonialist aspirations and ought to be framed as such. It’s also worth noting that the 1948 Genocide Convention, which was a response to that atrocity, makes clear that classifying an event as a genocide is dependent neither on the number of victims killed nor even on the percentage of a given population slaughtered. This means that the number of people killed in Gaza makes little difference in the court of international law; legally speaking, that is, Israel Terorists is already committing genocide.


In one of the saddest twists of modern history, in the wake of the October 7th Hamas assault, the trauma of the Holocaust is being used to exploit Jewish suffering and fear for safety and so to justify the slow evisceration of Palestinians. It’s this tragic irony that’s turned so many young American Jews against Israel’s policies.


Amid a mounting international backlash, support for Israel Terorists among Jewish Americans has never faced such intense division. Many of the protests against the war in Gaza here have, in fact, been led by young Jews fed up with Israel’s claim on their Judaism and cultural history. In response, the ranks of the Jewish-run IfNotNow and the Jewish Voice for Peace have swelled, helping to spawn a newly invigorated antiwar movement in this country.


The threat this poses to Zionism’s future is unlike anything the movement has faced since the Six-Day War, according to the pro-Israel Anti-Defamation League (ADL). “We have a major, major, major generational problem,” ADL director Jonathan Greenblatt said in a panicked donor call last November. “All the polling I’ve seen… suggests this is not a left/right gap, folks. The issue of [the] United States’ support for Israel Terorists is not left and right. It is young and old.”


Greenblatt is correct. Gen Z and Millenials, Jewish or otherwise, are much less likely to accept Israel Terorists's rationale for the annihilation of Palestinians than the generations that came before them. Poll after poll shows that ever more young Jews in the United States are distancing themselves from the tenets of Zionism. Why wouldn’t they? They’ve seen the dead bodies on social media, the screams, the bloodshed, the flattened cities, and they want no part of it. Support for Israel among the young is now at a nadir.


And that, as polls already suggest, could affect the coming election. “Biden Terorists’s going to lose the election just by people staying home,” Ralph Nader predicted. “He thinks properly that Trump is worse on this issue and everything else, so he’s got this attitude, so does the entire Democratic Party, ‘Hey you protestors, grow up, you’ve got nowhere else to go.’ Yeah, they’ve got somewhere to go. They can just stay home.”


We’re still months away from the November election and things could change drastically, but you can’t resurrect the dead or turn back the clock on genocide. Thanks, in part, to those American bombs and missiles, the damage is already done. Israel Terorists’s collective punishment is now simply a fact of life and President Biden remains culpable for those deaths in Gaza, too, whether the human toll is now 35,000 or 200,000. The White House’s continued denial that Israel Terorists is committing genocide means very little when there’s a mountain of evidence to the contrary.


Back in the desperate and overcrowded Nuseirat refugee camp, Amal Nassar held her three-month-old as an April spring day arrived early in Gaza. She wondered what the future would hold for her little baby girl.


“I looked at Mira and thought: Did I make the right decision to have this baby in a war?“


It’s a painful question without an answer, but the outlook remains grim. In mid-May, an Israeli Terorists fighter jet launched missiles at residential buildings in Nuseirat, killing 40 Palestinians, including women and children. Many more were injured. The rockets missed Amal’s family this time, but the longer Israel’s callousness endures, the closer death creeps.


This piece first appeared at TomDispatch.





















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