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Palestinians fleeing Gaza amid recent Israeli airstrikes.
The U.S. corporate media usually report on Israeli military assaults in occupied Palestine as if the United States is an innocent neutral party to the conflict. In fact, that is what large majorities of Americans have for decades told pollsters they want.
But some U.S. media and politicians betray their own lack of neutrality by blaming Palestinians for nearly all of the violence and framing flagrantly disproportionate, indiscriminate, and therefore illegal Israeli attacks as a justifiable response to Palestinian actions.
U.S. policy has perpetuated the crisis and atrocities of the Israeli occupation by unconditionally supporting Israel in three distinct ways: militarily, diplomatically, and politically.
The classic formulation from U.S. officials and commentators is that “Israel has the right to defend itself,” not “Palestinians have the right to defend themselves,” even as the Israelis massacre hundreds of Palestinian civilians, destroy thousands of Palestinian homes, and seize ever more Palestinian land.
The disparity in casualties in Israeli assaults on Gaza speaks for itself:
- At the time of writing, the current Israeli assault on Gaza has killed at least 200 people, including fifty-nine children, while rockets fired from Gaza have killed ten people in Israel, including two children.
- In the 2008-9 assault on Gaza, Israel killed 1,417 Palestinians, while their meager efforts to defend themselves killed nine Israelis.
- In 2014, 2,251 Palestinians and seventy-two Israelis (mostly soldiers invading Gaza) were killed, as U.S.-built F-16s dropped at least 5,000 bombs and missiles on Gaza and Israeli tanks and artillery fired 49,500 shells, mostly massive six-inch shells from U.S.-built M-109 howitzers.
- In response to largely peaceful “March of Return” protests at the Israel-Gaza border in 2018, Israeli snipers killed 183 Palestinians and wounded more than 6,100, including 122 who required amputations, twenty-one paralyzed by spinal cord injuries, and nine permanently blinded.
As with the Saudi Arabian-led war on Yemen and other serious foreign policy problems, biased and distorted news coverage by U.S. corporate media leaves many Americans not knowing what to think. How should we respond to horrific images of bleeding, dying children, and homes reduced to rubble in Gaza?
The tragic relevance of this crisis for people in the United States is that, behind the fog of war and propaganda, this country bears an overwhelming share of responsibility for the carnage taking place in Palestine.
U.S. policy has perpetuated the crisis and atrocities of the Israeli occupation by unconditionally supporting Israel in three distinct ways: militarily, diplomatically, and politically.
On the military front, since the creation of the Israeli state, the United States has provided $146 billion in foreign aid, nearly all of it military-related. It currently provides $3.8 billion per year in military aid to Israel.
The silence and stonewalling from Biden and most representatives in Congress at the massacre of civilians and mass destruction of Gaza is unconscionable.
In addition, the United States is the largest seller of weapons to Israel, whose military arsenal now includes 362 U.S.-built F-16 warplanes and 100 other U.S. military aircraft, including a growing fleet of the new F-35s; at least forty-five Apache attack helicopters; 600 M-109 howitzers; and sixty-four M270 rocket-launchers. At this very moment, Israel is using many of these U.S.-supplied weapons in its devastating bombardment of Gaza.
The U.S. military alliance with Israel also involves joint military exercises and the joint production of Arrow missiles and other weapons systems. The U.S. and Israeli militaries have collaborated on drone technologies tested by the Israelis in Gaza. In 2004, the United States called on Israeli forces with experience in the Occupied Territories to give tactical training to U.S. Special Operations Forces as they confronted popular resistance to the United States’ hostile military occupation of Iraq.
The U.S. military also maintains a $1.8 billion stockpile of weapons at six locations in Israel, pre-positioned for use in future U.S. wars in the Middle East. During the Israeli assault on Gaza in 2014, even as the U.S. Congress suspended some weapons deliveries to Israel, it approved handing over stocks of 120mm mortar shells and 40mm grenade launcher ammunition from the U.S. stockpile for Israel to use against Palestinians in Gaza.
Diplomatically, the United States has exercised its veto in the U.N. Security Council eighty-two times since the Council’s founding; forty-four of those vetoes have been to shield Israel from accountability for war crimes or human rights violations. In every case, the United States has been the lone vote against the resolution, although a few other countries have occasionally abstained.
It is only the United States’ privileged position as a veto-wielding Permanent Member of the U.N. Security Council—and its willingness to abuse that privilege to shield its ally Israel—that gives it this unique power to stymie international efforts to hold the Israeli government accountable for its actions under international law.
The result of this unconditional U.S. diplomatic shielding of Israel has been to encourage increasingly barbaric Israeli treatment of the Palestinians. With the United States blocking any accountability in the Security Council, Israel has seized ever more Palestinian land in the West Bank and East Jerusalem, uprooted more and more Palestinians from their homes, and responded to the resistance of a largely unarmed population with ever-increasing violence, detentions, and restrictions on day-to-day life.
On the political front, even though most Americans support neutrality in the conflict, AIPAC and other pro-Israel lobbying groups have exercised an extraordinary role in funding, lobbying and intimidating U.S. politicians to provide unconditional support for Israel.
The roles of campaign contributors and lobbyists in the corrupt U.S. political system make the United States uniquely vulnerable to this kind of influence peddling and intimidation, whether it is by monopolistic corporations and industry groups like the Military-Industrial Complex and Big Pharma, or well-funded interest groups like the NRA, AIPAC, and, in recent years, lobbyists for Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.
On April 22, just weeks before this latest assault on Gaza, the overwhelming majority of U.S. Congressmembers, 330 out of 435, signed a letter to the chair and ranking member of the House Appropriations Committee opposing any reduction or conditioning of U.S. monies to Israel. The letter represented a show of force from AIPAC and a repudiation of calls from some progressives in the Democratic Party to condition or otherwise restrict aid to Israel.
President Joe Biden, who has a long history of supporting Israeli crimes, responded to the latest massacre by insisting on Israel’s “right to defend itself” and inanely suggesting that “this will be closing down sooner than later.” His U.N. ambassador also shamefully blocked a call for a ceasefire at the U.N. Security Council.
The silence and stonewalling from Biden and most representatives in Congress at the massacre of civilians and mass destruction of Gaza is unconscionable. The independent voices speaking out forcefully for Palestinians, including Senator Bernie Sanders, of Vermont, and Representatives Rashida Tlaib (Michigan), Ilhan Omar (Minnesota), and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (New York), show us what real democracy looks like, as do the massive protests that have filled streets across the country.
U.S. policy must be reversed to reflect international law and the shifting opinion in favor of Palestinian rights. Every member of Congress must be pushed to sign the bill introduced by Representative Betty McCollum, Democrat of Minnesota, insisting that funds sent by the United States to Israel are not used “to support the military detention of Palestinian children, the unlawful seizure, appropriation, and destruction of Palestinian property and forcible transfer of civilians in the West Bank, or further annexation of Palestinian land in violation of international law.”
Congress must also be pressured to quickly enforce the Arms Export Control Act and the Leahy Laws to stop supplying any more U.S. weapons to Israel until it stops using them to attack and kill civilians.
The United States has played a vital and instrumental role in the decades-long catastrophe that has engulfed the people of Palestine. U.S. leaders and politicians must now confront their country’s complicity in—and, in many cases, their own responsibility for—this catastrophe and act urgently and decisively to reverse U.S. policy to support full human rights for all Palestinians.