For archives, these articles are being stored on TheWE.cc website.
The purpose is to advance understandings of environmental, political,
human rights, economic, democracy, scientific, and social justice issues.

 



 


"To destroy
one life, it is as if you have
destroyed an entire world".

The Talmud

During Israel's war against the people of Lebanon, our media, politicians and diplomats have colluded with the aggressors by distracting us with irrelevancies, by concocting controversies, and by framing the language of diplomacy.

In the fragile truce that is currently holding while Lebanon waits for Israel to withdraw, we are simply getting more of the same.

      Photo Fakers — Real War Crimes                    
Jonathan Cook      Nazareth      16 August 2006      
      www.counterpunch.org      

One example of the many distractions during the war that neatly reveals their true purpose is the "faked Reuters photograph" affair.

The supposed scandal of a Lebanese photographer tampering with a picture to add and darken smoke from an Israeli missile attack — to little or no effect, it should be noted — has not only been decried by activists on Zionist websites but amplified by mainstream commentators into a debate about whether we can trust the images of this war.

If we cannot be sure that one photograph is genuine, then maybe many more that purportedly show some of the 1,000 Lebanese civilians killed by Israel's bombardment are fake too.

Maybe the dead have been airbrushed in as easily as a puff of smoke.

Maybe too, were the smoke removed, we would still be able to see that Israel has "the most moral army in the world".

The far worse photography scandal, which is not talked about, is that the images of the war we saw over the past month in our Western media were constantly doctored, day in, day out.

Not by ordinary photographers who risk their lives, and hope to make their fortunes, conveying the reality of war.

But by senior executives of newspapers.

TV stations that ensure we are never presented with that reality.

Pictures binned or cropped if they hinted at what suffering and death truly looked like.

Western audiences not shown the row of charred corpses lying in the street.

Or the agony of a son pressing a scrap of cloth to the severed arm of his mother as she bled to death.

Or the crushed baby pulled from the rubble.

Our news and picture editors say this is about good taste.

They justify their decisions on the grounds that we should not exploit the victims of war by showing pornographic images of their death -- a useful excuse as we can never know what the dead would have chosen.

More significantly, however, the exclusion of meaningful images of the human cost of war protects us from understanding the appalling consequences of Israel's military actions, an onslaught sanctioned and supported by our Western media, politicians and diplomats, and indirectly by our taxes.

How long would Israel's war have been allowed to continue if American audiences had seen those charred bodies or dead babies?

How long would most Western viewers have remained silent if they were exposed to the kind of images shown daily on the Arabic satellite channels?

Might we then start to understand why they hate us?

And more usefully why we should hate ourselves?

Much the same purpose has been satisfied in the diplomatic arena by the endless debates about whether Israel's offensive was "disproportionate."

A word that raises a yawn almost the second it is uttered.

Rather than whether it was necessary.

And by the controversy initiated by the United Nations' Jan Egeland about the "cowardly blending" of Hizbullah fighters among Lebanese civilians.

A comment he made while in Jerusalem, not Beirut.

Based on evidence he has never divulged.

It is truly astonishing that the world's representative on humanitarian affairs made most impact in this war.

One in which more than 1,000 Lebanese were killed.

And in which hundreds of thousands more were made homeless.

Trying to hold Hizbullah to account for the thousands of Israeli air strikes on civilian areas of Lebanon.

Such is the logic and morality of our leaders.

And we are in the same territory again with the current discussions about how Lebanon and Israel will be rebuilt after the fighting.

Reconstruction -- another word that provokes instant boredom -- fits the bill perfectly.

Noth nations, we are told, will need billions of dollars to repair the damage done to their infrastructure.

The story of astronomical losses conveys reassuringly to us a sense both of technical problems that will eventually be solved and of the ultimate symmetry and justice in the suffering of these two nations.

Both peoples face a terrible financial burden imposed by war.

Both are equally deserving of our sympathy.

But let us pause.

How precisely are these two nations' material losses equivalent?

Israel's derive mostly from the enormous costs of its attacks on Lebanon.

The tens of thousands of missiles fired into its towns and villages, that killed mostly civilians.

And damage to the tanks, helicopters and warships that were the machinery needed to invade another sovereign country.

Most of the rest of the cost will follow from losses in tourism revenue and investment.

The consequences of a fall in confidence caused by Israel waging an unnecessary war for the return of two soldiers captured by Hizbullah rather than engage in negotiations.

A small share of Israel's lost billions has been inflicted by the aggression of Hizbullah.

The material damage done to Lebanon is in a different category altogether.

The bombed roads and bridges, the tens of thousands of homes in ruins, the destroyed power stations, factories and petrol stations, the oil slick across much of the Lebanese coast are the direct result of Israel's campaign of precision bombing of Lebanese civilian infrastructure.

Think of how your local court might consider the respective claims of these two nations if this were a domestic dispute between neighbors.

Would a judge view with any sympathy a claim from a man demanding compensation from his neighbour for the damage done to his expensive sledgehammer after a destructive rampage through the neighbor's home?

As well as for the loss of his reputation that followed the attack, as he found himself cast as the neighborhood pariah?

Would it make any difference if it could be proved that his neighbor had sworn provocatively at him before he went on his rampage?.

Incredibly, a similar claim may yet be heard — and possibly sympathetically — by the US civil courts if Israeli lawyers succeed in bringing a case for damages against the Lebanese government.

But all of this, like the "faked photograph affair", is another layer of distraction.

The real issue that should be the most pressing matter at the top of the world's agenda is not an assessment of the mutual crimes against property.

But the mostly one-sided crimes against human beings.

The massive Israeli war crimes that have been committed throughout the past month in Lebanon.

Whose effects will continue as cluster bombs blow up returning refugees.

War Crimes still being committed every day against the Palestinians of Gaza and the West Bank.

This urgent moral case is being quietly overlooked in favor of the material damages story.

And for reasons not hard to discern.

      Photo Fakers — Real War Crimes                    
Jonathan Cook      Nazareth      16 August 2006      
      www.counterpunch.org      

Bint Jbeil And Tyre Targets of Israeli Terror Campaign




This video shows the awful misery of those who are left with nothing.

In Bint Jbeil the unfortunate elderly and frail faced an agonising time as Israel bombs and flattened their town.

As www.turntoislam.com states: "Its awful how both Blair and Bush can let this continue....

TheWE.cc adds:

Blair and Bush not only let this continue, the US taxpayer is paying for the Israel military and supplying the bombs.

Blair and the Labour UK government has allowed passage of these bombs through the UK airfields.

It is not clear if they are still doing so."
[Note from TheWE.cc:

WWW.TURNTOISLAM.COM is a proselytising website

To download the videos you must register with the site if you enter.

We have included this video — from Google Video — and the one below — from YouTube — because we believe they are invaluable in understanding the present Lebanon horror

You access Google and YouTube only, when you view these videos from here.]

Lebanon "Fog of War"


Lebanese Doctors and Civillians Speak Out against the Terrorism they are facing from Israel.

Chemical Weapons, Cluster Bombs, Massacres Shocking Documentary About the War in Lebanon and the tradgedy in Qana.

Lebanese testimonials to the war.

Doctors Speak Out Against War Crimes.


Video taken from Sky News, placed on YouTube:

Galloway wipes the floor with Sky News anchor

Sky News anchor: Joining me now is a man who’s not known for sitting on the fence.   He passionately opposed the invasion of Iraq and now he feels that Hizbullah is justified in attacking Israel.   The Respect MP for Bethnel Green is in our London studio.   A very good evening, uh good morning to you Mr. Galloway.   How do you JUSTIFY your support for Hizbullah and its leader Sheik Hassan Nasrallah?

She might as well have punched him in the face and handed him a gun.




 U.S. to Israel:                     
 — An apocalypse of Evil being created                     
 — 500 'bunker buster' bombs                     
More on the building of the wall.
US and Israel's use of chemical agents


He was just shooting at children to amuse himself.
The celebration of Jerusalem day, the US missiles that rained onto children in Gaza,
and, a gathering of top articles over the past nine months
April 2004

US missiles — US money — and Palestine
March 2004

A young Palestinian man hitting an Israeli teargas bomb with his shoes away from demonstrators.

Israeli occupation soldiers killed two demonstrators and injured more than a hundred of them during anti-Wall demonstrations in the West Bank.
February 2004

A Palestinian elderly woman screaming in despair, complaining to God, as an Israeli occupation army bulldozer started to prepare her land for the construction of the separation wall in the village of Dair Qidees, near the West Bank city of Ramallah.
January 2004

Israeli occupation soldiers guarding bulldozers demolishing Palestinian homes.

A Palestinian man, perhaps who has lived in one of the homes, sits on the ground watching, his small daughters around him.
December 2003

Palestinian boys cry over the body of their father.

8 Palestinians were killed and 40 were injured,in the Rafah refugee camp in the southern Gaza Strip.

Many homes were destroyed during a savage Israeli occupation raid on the refugee camp on Tuesday.
November 2003

A Palestinian family in Jenin, moments before the Israeli occupation forces blew up their home.
October 2003

Tom Hurndall, the peace activist who was shot by Israeli occupation forces while helping to shield some Palestinian children, is declared to be brain dead.

Two Palestinian children were among about 100 Palestinian civilians injured in the Israeli air raids on Gaza Strip, which also resulted in killing 10 civilians.
September 2003

See the home blow up.

Blowing up more Palestinian homes as a collective punishment is a daily Israeli practice (paid for by US money) to control Palestinians under occupation.
The life and death of Kamala Sawalha

A student leaves her house every night, leaving her two young children at home, spends the next several hours traveling by taxi and on foot to get to the university in the neighboring town — just 15 minutes away.

Kamala wanted very badly to study — otherwise, it would be hard to understand the sacrifice she made for it.

To get up before dawn every morning, to leave the babies with their grandmother, to spend hours on the road in the heat and cold, even when pregnant, in order to get to the campus on time; to risk being shot or subjected to endless humiliations around every turn, and then to travel the whole way back — in a taxi where possible and on foot where necessary....

“Suddenly we were facing the soldiers,” he recounts.  The jeep was parked on the left side of the road and its right door was open.  Kamala let out a long scream.  It was the last sound she would ever make.

At 11:30 A.M., they buried Kamala Sawalha in the town cemetery.
Children trying to commit suicide
Now the landscape itself has changed
More Palestinian mothers are giving birth at home because they dare not risk ride to hospital.
Punching an arab in the face.

The father went through it and now the son is going through it and no one talks about it around the dinner table.

Furer is certain that what happened to him is not at all unique. 

Here he was — a creative, sensitive graduate of the Thelma Yellin High School of the Arts, who became an animal at the checkpoint, a violent sadist who beat up Palestinians because they didn’t show him the proper courtesy, who shot out tires of cars because their owners were playing the radio too loud, who abused a retarded teenage boy lying handcuffed on the floor of the Jeep, just because he had to take his anger out somehow.



 
For archive purposes, this article is being stored on TheWE.cc website.
The purpose is to advance understandings of environmental, political,
human rights, economic, democracy, scientific, and social justice issues.