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Date: September 03, 2024 at 17:05:27
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: A big reason why there was no talk of an Arms Embargo at the DNC:

URL: https://www.counterpunch.org/2024/08/31/a-whiter-shade-of-genocide/


A Whiter Shade of Genocide
"A big reason why there was no talk of an Arms Embargo at the DNC: The leading
15 weapons contractors are forecast to log a cash flow of $52 billion in 2026—
almost double their combined cash flow at the end of 2021

AUGUST 31, 2024
A Whiter Shade of Genocide
The Scourging of Gaza: Diary of a Genocidal War
BY JEFFREY ST. CLAIR

“It’s hard not to feel invisible as a Palestinian-American. Our trauma and pain feel
unseen and ignored by both parties. One party uses our identity as a slur, and the
other refuses to hear from us.” – Rep. Rashida Tlaib Israel drew all sorts of US
military forces and intelligence assets into the Middle East […]


Responses:
[440662]


440662


Date: September 03, 2024 at 17:12:43
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: August proved to be 2nd busiest month for US arms deliveries to Israel

URL: https://www.counterpunch.org/2024/09/03/a-return-to-form-expediting-us-arms-to-israel/


September 3, 2024:
"Gaza’s Civil Defence spokesperson says Israeli strikes on Gaza City have
intensified since this morning, as at least nine were killed – including two children
– when Israel hit a family home there.

Five children are wounded as Israeli forces target a residential building near Al-
Aqsa Martyrs Hospital in Deir el-Balah in central Gaza shortly after a pause in
fighting for polio vaccinations ends."
source: AlJazeera.com

CounterPunch
"August proved to be the second busiest month for US arms deliveries to Israel’s
Nevatim Airbase since the October 2023 attacks by Hamas."

SEPTEMBER 3, 2024
A Return to Form: Expediting US Arms to Israel
BY BINOY KAMPMARK

Photograph by Nathaniel St. Clair
Despite much grandstanding in the Biden administration about halting specific
arms shipments to Israel over feigned concerns about how they might be used
(inflicting death is the expected form), US military supplies have been restored
with barely a murmur. In a report in Haaretz on August 29, a rush of weapons to
Israel has been noticed since the end of July.

August proved to be the second busiest month for US arms deliveries to Israel’s
Nevatim Airbase since the October 2023 attacks by Hamas. This has taken
place alongside an increased concentration of US forces in the region since
Israel’s assassinations of Hezbollah commander Fuad Shukr and Hamas political
chief Ismail Haniyeh at the end of last month. Two aircraft carriers, a guided
missile submarine, and deployments of advanced F-22 stealth aircraft in Qatar,
have featured in a show intended to deter Tehran from any retaliatory strikes.
After examining open-source aviation data from the end of July, Haaretz
concluded that the issue of delayed shipments of US weapons had “been
solved.” Dozens of flights by US military transport planes, along with civilian and
military Israeli cargo planes, mostly from Qatar and the Dover Air Force Base in
Delaware, had been noted. Demands by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu in his July 24 speech to Congress that US military aid be
“dramatically” expedited to “end the war in Gaza and help prevent a broader war
in the Middle East”, had been heeded.

On August 26, Israel received its 500th aerial shipment of weapons and military
supplies from the United States since the latest war’s commencement. The 500
flights have also been supplemented by 107 sea shipments, altogether
facilitating the transfer of 50,000 tons of military equipment in an initiative
between the US military, Israel’s Defence Ministry’s Directorate of Production and
Procurement and Mission to the United States, the IDF’s planning Directorate and
the Israeli Air Force.

During the same month, the Democratic National Convention, which saw no
debate about the candidature of Kamala Harris as its choice for presidential
candidate, had tepidly promised some agitation on continued arms to Israel.

Ahead of the event, the Uncommitted movement’s 30 delegates, picked by voters
alarmed by US support for Israel’s war machine in Gaza, were hoping to convince
the 4,000 pledged delegates Harris had captured to add an arms embargo to its
campaign in order to induce a ceasefire.

A petition by the group sought two outcomes: the adding of language to both the
party and campaign platform “that unequivocally supports a permanent ceasefire
in Gaza and a cessation of supplying weapons for Israel’s assault and occupation
against Palestinians.”

These wishes proved much too salty for the apparatchiks and party managers.
The Democratic Party’s 2024 national platform ironically enough begins with an
effusive “land acknowledgment” to “the ancestors and descendants of Tribal
Nations” but plays it safe regarding an ally very much the product of territorial
seizure, violence and occupation. Despite mutterings in the party room about a
split between moderate and progressive members on Israel’s conduct of the war,
the topic of a ceasefire never made it to the committee hearings when the
document was drafted.

In firmly insisting on continued US support for Israel in its war against Hamas,
much is made in the platform about US efforts to forge a way that will see a
release of the hostages, “a durable ceasefire”, the easing of “humanitarian
suffering in Gaza” and the “possible normalization between Israel and key Arab
states, together with meaningful progress and a political horizon for the
Palestinian people.” The language is instructive: the Palestinians are objects of
pitiful charity, at the mercy of Israel, the US, and various Arab states. Like
toddlers, they are to be managed, steered, guided, their political choices forever
mediated through the wishes of other powers.

With Israel remaining Washington’s paramount ally in the Middle East, that
process of steering and managing the unruly Palestinians has been, thus far,
lethal. During her first interview given after the convention (she has an aversion
to them), Harris scotched any suggestions on going wobbly on Israel. “I’m
unequivocal and unwavering in my commitment to Israel’s defence and its ability
to defend itself, and that’s not going to change,” she told CNN’s Dana Bush. In
what has become a standard refrain, Harris lamented that “far too many innocent
Palestinians have been killed” while acknowledging Israel’s right to self-defence.

When asked whether she would alter President Biden’s policy on furnishing
military assistance to Israel, “No” came the reply. “We have to get a deal done.
The war must end, and we must get a deal that is about getting the hostages out.
I’ve met with the families of the American hostages. Let’s get the hostages out.
Let’s get the ceasefire done.”

This middle-management lingo says much about Harris’s worldview; in wishing
to “get the ceasefire done”, she is encouraging a range of factors that will make
sure nothing of the sort will be achieved. The Netanyahu formula has worked its
usual black magic. Hence, the lack of an arms embargo, and the continued,
generous supply to the IDF from their largest military benefactor.

Binoy Kampmark was a Commonwealth Scholar at Selwyn College, Cambridge.
He lectures at RMIT University, Melbourne. Email: bkampmark@gmail.com


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