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"The champagne-quaffing in Tel Aviv and Jerusalem while Gaza drowned in blood left a profoundly sour taste in the mouth." (Photo: Twitter)
The contrasting images coming out of Israel and the occupied Palestinian territories on Monday could not have been starker - or more disturbing.
Faced with protests at the perimeter fence in Gaza, Israeli snipers killed dozens of unarmed Palestinians and wounded more than 2,000 others, including children, women, journalists and paramedics, in a hail of live fire. Amnesty, the international human rights organisation, rightly called it a "horror show".
Such horror is now so routine that TV anchors could only headline the news as the worst day of bloodshed in Gaza in four years, when Israel massacred civilians in its last major military assault.
Already gasping from the chokehold of Israel's decade-long blockade of Gaza, local hospitals are now collapsing from the weight of casualties.
A few kilometres away, meanwhile, Israelis were partying.
So-called "liberal" Tel Aviv was busy "chicken dancing" with Netta, who had just won the Eurovision Song Contest and gave a free open-air performance to celebrate.
And in Jerusalem, Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu was glad-handing a bevy of US officials, including Ivanka Trump, the president's daughter and policy adviser. They were there to beam for the cameras as the US opened its embassy in the occupied city.
The move pre-empts negotiations over the city's fate and sabotages Palestinian ambitions for East Jerusalem to become the capital of a future Palestinian state.
Netanyahu's grin said it all. As he mouthed platitudes about "Middle Eastern peace", he finally had Washington's blessing for all of Jerusalem as Israel's capital. And next year Europe will give its implicit blessing too by hosting the Eurovision Song Contest there.
But amid the euphoria, a few Israeli commentators understood that politics is about more than power - it's about imagery too. The champagne-quaffing in Tel Aviv and Jerusalem while Gaza drowned in blood left a profoundly sour taste in the mouth.
There was more than a whiff of hypocrisy too in statements about "defending borders" from a state that has refused to declare its borders since its creation exactly 70 years ago - as well as from a Netanyahu government currently trying to establish a Greater Israel over the Palestinian territories.
But the hypocrisy was not restricted to Israel and Washington, which parroted Mr Netanyahu's talking points.
There was an ugly equivocation from other western leaders. They spoke of "regret", "tragedy" and "concern at the loss of life", as though an act of God had struck Gaza, not an order from Israeli commanders to quell the Palestinian urge for freedom with live ammunition.
Israeli politicians and media have desperately searched for a moral justification for these executions. They have talked of "kite terrorism" and a supposed stone-throwing threat to soldiers positioned hundreds of yards away.
While thousands of Palestinians have been executed or maimed, how many Israelis have been harmed in the past six weeks of Gaza's protests? Precisely none.
This is a strange kind of terror.
The reality is that tiny Gaza is becoming rapidly uninhabitable, as the United Nations has repeatedly warned. For more than a decade Israel has blockaded it from land, air and sea, while intermittently pummelling the enclave with missiles and military invasions.
A senior New York Times correspondent tweeted on Monday that Gaza's Palestinians looked as though they had a "death wish". But two million Palestinians - a population rapidly growing - are inmates in what is effectively a shrinking prison, whose store rooms are almost bare.
Tens of thousands of them have shown they are prepared to risk their lives not for some death cult but to win freedom, the most precious human impulse of all.
And they have preferred confrontational, non-violent resistance as a way to shame Israel and the world into recognising their plight.
And yet instead, Israel has stripped them of all agency by falsely claiming that they are pawns in a game by Hamas to pressure Israel.
But in so far as Hamas is trying to influence Israel, what is its aim?
Last week, a gloating Israeli media reported that Hamas was quietly appealing for a long-term truce with Israel, effectively renouncing the Palestinians' right to violently resist Israel's occupation.
Even this minimal concession is rejected by Israel. Instead an Israeli minister responded to Monday's slaughter by proposing that Israel assassinate the Hamas leadership.
Israel may be without remorse, but are western leaders feeling shamed?
Apart from South Africa and Turkey, none has so far withdrawn an ambassador. There are no calls for embargos on sales of arms, no demands for war crimes investigations, no threats of trade sanctions.
And no plans, of course, for the kind of "humanitarian intervention" western governments have keenly promoted in other parts of the Middle East where civilians are under threat.
For seven decades, the west has pampered Israel at every turn. The lack of any meaningful punishment for violating Palestinian rights led directly to Monday's massacre.
And the failure to inflict a price on Israel for this massacre - in fact, the reverse: visible rewards with a relocated US embassy and the chance to host the Eurovision Song Contest - will lead to the next massacre, and the one after.
Handwringing is not enough. It is time for anyone with a conscience to act.
A version of this article first appeared in the National, Abu Dhabi.
Dear Common Dreams reader, It’s been nearly 30 years since I co-founded Common Dreams with my late wife, Lina Newhouser. We had the radical notion that journalism should serve the public good, not corporate profits. It was clear to us from the outset what it would take to build such a project. No paid advertisements. No corporate sponsors. No millionaire publisher telling us what to think or do. Many people said we wouldn't last a year, but we proved those doubters wrong. Together with a tremendous team of journalists and dedicated staff, we built an independent media outlet free from the constraints of profits and corporate control. Our mission has always been simple: To inform. To inspire. To ignite change for the common good. Building Common Dreams was not easy. Our survival was never guaranteed. When you take on the most powerful forces—Wall Street greed, fossil fuel industry destruction, Big Tech lobbyists, and uber-rich oligarchs who have spent billions upon billions rigging the economy and democracy in their favor—the only bulwark you have is supporters who believe in your work. But here’s the urgent message from me today. It's never been this bad out there. And it's never been this hard to keep us going. At the very moment Common Dreams is most needed, the threats we face are intensifying. We need your support now more than ever. We don't accept corporate advertising and never will. We don't have a paywall because we don't think people should be blocked from critical news based on their ability to pay. Everything we do is funded by the donations of readers like you. When everyone does the little they can afford, we are strong. But if that support retreats or dries up, so do we. Will you donate now to make sure Common Dreams not only survives but thrives? —Craig Brown, Co-founder |
The contrasting images coming out of Israel and the occupied Palestinian territories on Monday could not have been starker - or more disturbing.
Faced with protests at the perimeter fence in Gaza, Israeli snipers killed dozens of unarmed Palestinians and wounded more than 2,000 others, including children, women, journalists and paramedics, in a hail of live fire. Amnesty, the international human rights organisation, rightly called it a "horror show".
Such horror is now so routine that TV anchors could only headline the news as the worst day of bloodshed in Gaza in four years, when Israel massacred civilians in its last major military assault.
Already gasping from the chokehold of Israel's decade-long blockade of Gaza, local hospitals are now collapsing from the weight of casualties.
A few kilometres away, meanwhile, Israelis were partying.
So-called "liberal" Tel Aviv was busy "chicken dancing" with Netta, who had just won the Eurovision Song Contest and gave a free open-air performance to celebrate.
And in Jerusalem, Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu was glad-handing a bevy of US officials, including Ivanka Trump, the president's daughter and policy adviser. They were there to beam for the cameras as the US opened its embassy in the occupied city.
The move pre-empts negotiations over the city's fate and sabotages Palestinian ambitions for East Jerusalem to become the capital of a future Palestinian state.
Netanyahu's grin said it all. As he mouthed platitudes about "Middle Eastern peace", he finally had Washington's blessing for all of Jerusalem as Israel's capital. And next year Europe will give its implicit blessing too by hosting the Eurovision Song Contest there.
But amid the euphoria, a few Israeli commentators understood that politics is about more than power - it's about imagery too. The champagne-quaffing in Tel Aviv and Jerusalem while Gaza drowned in blood left a profoundly sour taste in the mouth.
There was more than a whiff of hypocrisy too in statements about "defending borders" from a state that has refused to declare its borders since its creation exactly 70 years ago - as well as from a Netanyahu government currently trying to establish a Greater Israel over the Palestinian territories.
But the hypocrisy was not restricted to Israel and Washington, which parroted Mr Netanyahu's talking points.
There was an ugly equivocation from other western leaders. They spoke of "regret", "tragedy" and "concern at the loss of life", as though an act of God had struck Gaza, not an order from Israeli commanders to quell the Palestinian urge for freedom with live ammunition.
Israeli politicians and media have desperately searched for a moral justification for these executions. They have talked of "kite terrorism" and a supposed stone-throwing threat to soldiers positioned hundreds of yards away.
While thousands of Palestinians have been executed or maimed, how many Israelis have been harmed in the past six weeks of Gaza's protests? Precisely none.
This is a strange kind of terror.
The reality is that tiny Gaza is becoming rapidly uninhabitable, as the United Nations has repeatedly warned. For more than a decade Israel has blockaded it from land, air and sea, while intermittently pummelling the enclave with missiles and military invasions.
A senior New York Times correspondent tweeted on Monday that Gaza's Palestinians looked as though they had a "death wish". But two million Palestinians - a population rapidly growing - are inmates in what is effectively a shrinking prison, whose store rooms are almost bare.
Tens of thousands of them have shown they are prepared to risk their lives not for some death cult but to win freedom, the most precious human impulse of all.
And they have preferred confrontational, non-violent resistance as a way to shame Israel and the world into recognising their plight.
And yet instead, Israel has stripped them of all agency by falsely claiming that they are pawns in a game by Hamas to pressure Israel.
But in so far as Hamas is trying to influence Israel, what is its aim?
Last week, a gloating Israeli media reported that Hamas was quietly appealing for a long-term truce with Israel, effectively renouncing the Palestinians' right to violently resist Israel's occupation.
Even this minimal concession is rejected by Israel. Instead an Israeli minister responded to Monday's slaughter by proposing that Israel assassinate the Hamas leadership.
Israel may be without remorse, but are western leaders feeling shamed?
Apart from South Africa and Turkey, none has so far withdrawn an ambassador. There are no calls for embargos on sales of arms, no demands for war crimes investigations, no threats of trade sanctions.
And no plans, of course, for the kind of "humanitarian intervention" western governments have keenly promoted in other parts of the Middle East where civilians are under threat.
For seven decades, the west has pampered Israel at every turn. The lack of any meaningful punishment for violating Palestinian rights led directly to Monday's massacre.
And the failure to inflict a price on Israel for this massacre - in fact, the reverse: visible rewards with a relocated US embassy and the chance to host the Eurovision Song Contest - will lead to the next massacre, and the one after.
Handwringing is not enough. It is time for anyone with a conscience to act.
A version of this article first appeared in the National, Abu Dhabi.
The contrasting images coming out of Israel and the occupied Palestinian territories on Monday could not have been starker - or more disturbing.
Faced with protests at the perimeter fence in Gaza, Israeli snipers killed dozens of unarmed Palestinians and wounded more than 2,000 others, including children, women, journalists and paramedics, in a hail of live fire. Amnesty, the international human rights organisation, rightly called it a "horror show".
Such horror is now so routine that TV anchors could only headline the news as the worst day of bloodshed in Gaza in four years, when Israel massacred civilians in its last major military assault.
Already gasping from the chokehold of Israel's decade-long blockade of Gaza, local hospitals are now collapsing from the weight of casualties.
A few kilometres away, meanwhile, Israelis were partying.
So-called "liberal" Tel Aviv was busy "chicken dancing" with Netta, who had just won the Eurovision Song Contest and gave a free open-air performance to celebrate.
And in Jerusalem, Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu was glad-handing a bevy of US officials, including Ivanka Trump, the president's daughter and policy adviser. They were there to beam for the cameras as the US opened its embassy in the occupied city.
The move pre-empts negotiations over the city's fate and sabotages Palestinian ambitions for East Jerusalem to become the capital of a future Palestinian state.
Netanyahu's grin said it all. As he mouthed platitudes about "Middle Eastern peace", he finally had Washington's blessing for all of Jerusalem as Israel's capital. And next year Europe will give its implicit blessing too by hosting the Eurovision Song Contest there.
But amid the euphoria, a few Israeli commentators understood that politics is about more than power - it's about imagery too. The champagne-quaffing in Tel Aviv and Jerusalem while Gaza drowned in blood left a profoundly sour taste in the mouth.
There was more than a whiff of hypocrisy too in statements about "defending borders" from a state that has refused to declare its borders since its creation exactly 70 years ago - as well as from a Netanyahu government currently trying to establish a Greater Israel over the Palestinian territories.
But the hypocrisy was not restricted to Israel and Washington, which parroted Mr Netanyahu's talking points.
There was an ugly equivocation from other western leaders. They spoke of "regret", "tragedy" and "concern at the loss of life", as though an act of God had struck Gaza, not an order from Israeli commanders to quell the Palestinian urge for freedom with live ammunition.
Israeli politicians and media have desperately searched for a moral justification for these executions. They have talked of "kite terrorism" and a supposed stone-throwing threat to soldiers positioned hundreds of yards away.
While thousands of Palestinians have been executed or maimed, how many Israelis have been harmed in the past six weeks of Gaza's protests? Precisely none.
This is a strange kind of terror.
The reality is that tiny Gaza is becoming rapidly uninhabitable, as the United Nations has repeatedly warned. For more than a decade Israel has blockaded it from land, air and sea, while intermittently pummelling the enclave with missiles and military invasions.
A senior New York Times correspondent tweeted on Monday that Gaza's Palestinians looked as though they had a "death wish". But two million Palestinians - a population rapidly growing - are inmates in what is effectively a shrinking prison, whose store rooms are almost bare.
Tens of thousands of them have shown they are prepared to risk their lives not for some death cult but to win freedom, the most precious human impulse of all.
And they have preferred confrontational, non-violent resistance as a way to shame Israel and the world into recognising their plight.
And yet instead, Israel has stripped them of all agency by falsely claiming that they are pawns in a game by Hamas to pressure Israel.
But in so far as Hamas is trying to influence Israel, what is its aim?
Last week, a gloating Israeli media reported that Hamas was quietly appealing for a long-term truce with Israel, effectively renouncing the Palestinians' right to violently resist Israel's occupation.
Even this minimal concession is rejected by Israel. Instead an Israeli minister responded to Monday's slaughter by proposing that Israel assassinate the Hamas leadership.
Israel may be without remorse, but are western leaders feeling shamed?
Apart from South Africa and Turkey, none has so far withdrawn an ambassador. There are no calls for embargos on sales of arms, no demands for war crimes investigations, no threats of trade sanctions.
And no plans, of course, for the kind of "humanitarian intervention" western governments have keenly promoted in other parts of the Middle East where civilians are under threat.
For seven decades, the west has pampered Israel at every turn. The lack of any meaningful punishment for violating Palestinian rights led directly to Monday's massacre.
And the failure to inflict a price on Israel for this massacre - in fact, the reverse: visible rewards with a relocated US embassy and the chance to host the Eurovision Song Contest - will lead to the next massacre, and the one after.
Handwringing is not enough. It is time for anyone with a conscience to act.
A version of this article first appeared in the National, Abu Dhabi.