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tv   Al Jazeera Investigations Gaza  Al Jazeera  October 6, 2024 4:00am-5:01am AST

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dollars on all, just on the council of resulting exclusive stories, explosive results, which is 0 investigations. the hi, somebody to melinda, all the top stories and all to 0. there's been a new badge of is ready as strikes in the roots with explosions walk into cities, southern suburbs into the early hours of sunday morning as well as military it earlier told some residents in the southern suburb of da here to leave multiple strikes on the area of close extensive damage and recent days loss, plumes of smoke were visible, often attacks those to be able to afford your account has moved from the liberties
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capital. it was very loud from where i was standing. i made everyone jump to meet you. so these sounds really echoing around these buildings quite terrifying for residents, civil slats to central. they route here. now the x rays have been issuing warnings on social media out in arabic for residence to leave these areas. say that we're about to bomb them. a lot of residents the same, but they say the problem one building and then they from another one. this would trust in what they're doing. they also tell a residence to stand about 500 meters away. but i mean, you saw on, on your tvs that this huge explosions taking place. i hope many people don't trust, but 500 meters is even enough to sound. i mean, as i said, i was standing a few kilometers away. and it was incredibly loud from here. so of course, very frightening. a earlier live, a nice security socialist told old to 0 that his but i have lost contact with the
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children of his executive council house himself. you, dean, is really media reported he was the target of intense bombardment of the here in the early i was a friday. so if you things being seen as a possible success a to his, when a chief us, and those rela who was killed last week, is really media reporting more than a 110 whistles have been fired from lebanon into northern israel since friday morning. at least 25 people have been killed. that's according to the liberties health ministry. the 3 people were reported injured and dental assault in those and as well, of the badge of rockets will fired from live and on. meanwhile, is really prime minister benjamin netanyahu was again vile to respond to it was most all attack on tuesday. almost $200.00 missiles were far from being run into israel. most of them were intercepted, but some hits to a basis and areas around the headquarters of the is really intelligence agency most
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sought in kind of, if you don't mind, she got she couldn't. iran has already twice loads hundreds of missiles on a land and on a cities and one of the largest ballistic missile attacks in history. no country in the world would tolerate such an assault on its cities and civilians. and neither will the state of israel. israel has the obligation and the right to defend itself and to respond to these attacks. and that is what we will do because at least 16 palestinians have entails and it is really a strike on a mosque and that will by law in central garza, it will sheltering displays. people now actual hospital, some of those injured in the attack. i've been seriously wounded, is really strikes that kills more than 50 palestinians across garza. and that since saturday morning, a vaccination campaign against inbox is underway and goma in the democratic republic of congo. the cities being hit, the hardest spying outbreaks. health officials have recorded more than the 50000 cases. the disease is killed the most 1000 people in d r c. so as we start to be
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a fully was president, donald trump is all the campaign, riley, and butler, pennsylvania. that's the town we survived an assassination attempt nearly 3 months ago. so 12 weeks ago we all took a bullet for america. and well, we are all as good as that. everyone goes out and vote. so we got to, when we can't let this happen to our country, we can, we can take another 4 years like this. we won't have a country left, we're not going to have a country left. and all of this will be for nothing. if you don't get out and vote a f i x and electric vehicle factory and vietnam is destroyed around 5000 a bikes and motorcycles that happened to the northern province of lankson 6 smoke rose above the blaze at its way through the facility. oh, those are the headlines and use continues your knowledge, a 0 off to the bottom line, the
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higher steve clements and i have a question, a full year of war in gaza. and now, with this really troops invading lebanon, are the us in israel working to reshape the entire region. let's get to the bottom line. the what started on the morning of october 7th, 2023, with the surprise attacked by hum us on is really military bases and towns killing 1200 is really isn't taking hundreds, captive has had ongoing consequences and reverberations since that day. nearly a year ago in response is really is killed, tens of thousands of palestinians starve millions and turn the gaza strip into an old, livable health scape. now it is broadens the conflict with attacks against 11 on and the killing of house on the swallow and the rest of the leadership of hezbollah, which was engineering attacks against israel in support of gauze. but that's not
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even half the story around the world. the epic violence has spark debates on the nature of racism, of colonialism, of double standards and a free speech. so are we witnessing major ships in the middle east? or is history repeating itself? wakeham all by israel against his enemies without seriously addressing the injustice against the palestinian people and are these developments taking place according to a grand us strategy for the region or in spite of it. today we're talking with political science, a steven wall, who teaches international affairs at harvard university. steven, thank you so much for joining us today. let me just start out with the fact that we've got a lot of conflicts going on in the region. we've seen now the death of hospitalized liter. uh, we've seen the death of the political leader of hamas is, is really prime minister benjamin netanyahu succeeding in the short term. yes, israel has achieved a number of really impressive tactical successes. some of them were not in any real
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doubt, it was obvious that if israel wanted to use its military powers to decimate guys, that it could do that. but some of the more surprising the page your attack against has again, testable forces for example, is something that i think to almost everybody by surprise. the big question is whether or not you can translate those tactical successes impressive though they might be into larger strategic games. and that's much more difficult to do. i have my doubts as to whether or not it's actually going to be a transformative moment in the middle east, even though i think that's probably what these rarely are hoping for. we've all watched the conflict over this last year since how mazda attacked israel in october 7th. and i have to tell you, i've interviewed on this show a general. so i've interview political leaders, senators, talk to senior us military officials and even white house officials who of cautioned israel cautioned his leadership and said that it needs to not confuse its
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short term security needs with long term strategic objectives. and yet it seems like it's really leadership has lost that caution off and followed a plan to destroy, to do what it said it was going to do, destroy those people that were out to get it. and i'm just sort of interested that after a year of this caution, is there a point where those advising caution kick in to being actually correct? i don't think so. i mean, 1st of all, how mazda has not been defeated in gaza, it's been seriously damaged, but it's still in existence, as well as continuing to fire rockets as israel preventing you know, his release from returning to homes in the north, despite the death of their leader. and a lot of their senior leadership as well. it's a funny thing, but you know, dropping bombs on people and humiliating them, tends not to make them come over to your side and suddenly want to kind of deal, particularly when they don't have any really attractive options in front of them.
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i've been reminded actually for the last several days about that, that famous moment in 2003 when george w bush, blue aboard the u. s. s. abraham lincoln instead before a band or saying mission accomplished again, the united states that achieved a short term tactical success in iraq. but it turned out to be the beginning of the quarter strategic night here. and i think that is really should be, should be more careful in trying to think that they can translate these tactical successes into a real change in the strategic situation. you know, tween itself being, steve, that i, i found very compelling. you said, this is pretty simple. if you don't want someone to do something, you don't give them the means to do it. one must therefore conclude the us government does not object to what israel has been doing for the past year. and i'm just interested in whether or not us leadership is trying to have it both ways. are they on one hand saying hey, we tried to caution them,
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but at the same time they're sending them all the bombs to make this possible. yeah, that's actually a good way to characterize it. i mean, uh, binding and blinking. it certainly try to distance themselves. uh, least you know, positionally from israel in a variety of ways and try to convey that they don't really approve of some of what is real is doing. they're really not supporting and they're trying to get them to stop. they're trying to get a ceasefire. and i think they're doing that for larger diplomat like purposes. they want to try and salvage what's left of america's image in the world. well, not doing anything that's going to cause them problems in american domestic politics. and i think in the case of both by vin blinking may or something of true believers, you know, both, both of them openly declaring that they are genuinely committed scientists as well . what's interesting is you don't see them trying to defend their policies by claiming that it's in america's national interest. i find that quite striking you never here blinking and articulate life continuing to send is real,
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billions of dollars of military is making me united states more secure are making the added states more popular around the world, doing anything for ordinary americans as well. i think they're not trying to make those arguments because they're extremely difficult to make at this point. um, so yes, i think they've been trying to have it both ways. the problem is the longer the work continues, the more it expands, the more israel continues to defy. america's uh, you know, advice with no real consequences from america. the less compelling, the less convincing that attempt to play both sides is going to be to most observers. okay. are very, very few relationships in the world, in my view of unconditional love. let's just see there. but this, there are, there are no conditions to this alliance. is, is real making strategic choices for the united states that it can't extract itself from a lot. it's certainly because they're not choices we can extract ourselves from.
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it's the question of whether or not we're willing to there's no question that there's a relationship of nearly unconditional american support. it's rather one sided support and that we back israel to the health. and israel does pretty much, it wants whatever it wants, even if that's not in america's america's interest. what i think is really, in some ways tragic about all of this is that this kind of unconditional support is in the long run, not good for israel, right? it's allowed israel to continue the occupation for 40 plus years, which i think does threaten israel's, a long term future. it has strengthen the extreme is in israel, who have a sort of messy attic view of israel's future and are increasingly powerful in his really domestic politics. as well, it's supported the war allowed israel to continue and not have a ceasefire, which is not the norm is damage to the israeli economy. and despite the sort of
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short term tactical military successes, they've achieved in gaza and now in love and on it hasn't done anything to help israel's long term future. and may in fact, really actually cost it a great deal. something that most americans don't appreciate is that there are now roughly 500000 is riley is living outside of israel. 80 percent of them have told the pollsters that they have no intention of going back. and the number of israelis trying to leave has increased the locked in the last year. most of them are, of course, are the well educated, secular israelis that are the backbone of its high tech economy. so this has really a serious, long term consequences. and that is being unwittingly aided and abetted by the kind of unconditional support that the united states has been providing. you know, the other major relationship in the region relevant to this conflict is that between iran and has belong, died as the same thing. are there conditions on iran relationship with its proxy organization? and i think it is the rainy, as i said,
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from the very beginning of the this conflict you know, back a year ago that they made it clear that they have no desire to expand this, no desire to really escalate. what one does have to ask though, is whether or not this will lead iran to simply sort of run up the white flagpole. it's tens. and i think there's no evidence whatsoever to suggest that they're likely to do that. i think the thing that is of considerable concern or ought to be of considerable concern is at what point do the iranians decide that they can no longer be just a lazy nuclear power, which is what they are today? was the capacity to build a bomb. if they want to, but they haven't tried to do so, what point to this site? it's time to go past the red lines to try and build a bomb in secret. so they can become a nuclear power and have a nuclear to turn the same way that israel does. i don't know if that's going to happen, but every time you get an event like the things we've been hacked,
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seeing in the last few weeks, any time, something like that happens, it increases iran incentive to want to have a deterrent of its own. and at some point, i think they're likely to try and make that decision. that's very risky for them. it might provoke a wider war. it might eventually drag the united states in, which is something of course the united states doesn't want either on. so we ought to be thinking about the long term strategic consequences and the nuclear dimension as well as we try to evaluate what the long term here is going to be. this sounds to me a lot like george bush, richard cheney the golf for the thinking that you could come in and, you know, fundamentally change the entire region. i mean, i'd be interested in your thoughts, are we back to america thinking that the, the us and it's ally have the ability to completely re shape the region and make the region safe for democracy. create safety through the kind of militaristic
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dimension is taking now. yeah. well, as i said, as a very beginning, you know, that this did remind me of george bush and the mission accomplished moment when we suddenly thought we were going to re shake them at least. and it didn't work out any of the ways that the neo conservatives invoice expected people have been predicting that iran would have another revolution. another up people are, the clerical regime would collapse and be replaced by a pro american regime. they've been predicting that over and over and over again for probably 30 or 40 years. now. one can never rule out of something like that happening, but it hasn't happened yet, and there is no evidence that it's likely to happen any time soon. so to that, that, that somehow these events taking place 11 on and gaza and elsewhere are going to suddenly cause enough people in iran and more or that that a people will then bait or break in a problem. american direction, i think, is to assume an awful lot of that sort of wistful thinking is not the kind of thing
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one lot of baseball strategy on see what is the state of play as you see it of the international court of justice and the various arrest warrants in his put out for his really leaders and how is we all will continue to function with an international system of rules and norms. you think that ignore level um as you look at israel's future as well, the international criminal court indictments and the international court of justice rulings, you know, they have no enforcement capacity and they're going to take a long time to play themselves through the system. i think what's happened inside israel is they're simply, you know, have their fingers in their ears. they're not going to pay any attention. they do not regard these institutions as a, as credible or legitimate, particularly when they're the ones being criticized. so they're going to ignore them. and of course we unfortunately seem united states for all. let's talk about a rules based order and all of its alleged commitment to international law largely
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dismiss these activities as well as part of the unconditional support we're providing. but i think over time this can help but have a negative effect and reinforced the idea of israel as a pariah state. a state that has wandered all of the sympathy it had on october 8th of last year after those attacks. when many people around the world were deeply sympathetic to what israel was facing, i think that's all gone now. and when you see all those and pastors walk out of the un general assembly where netanyahu started speaking, on the one hand, it's just a symbolic action. but on the other hand, it conveys a deeper sense of those governments. recognizing that they don't want to be in uh, showing any signs of approval. in fact, it's in their interest to show signs of disapproval. and over time, i think that hasn't corrosive effect on israel standing on the ability of its
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citizens to travel prosper, do well around the world. and that's not it. israel's long term interest either. i think the united states is often tried to position itself as on both sides. but where the air of leaders, where are it has, is jordan threatening to rip up? it's priest, peace treaty with israel over what it seeing and gaza. how do you see that palestine and this question of resolving palestine? has anyone seriously willing to put political leverage on the line for their interest as well? that's the tragedy of the palestinian, is that by and large they have certainly been, you know, horribly treated by israelis and originally by the scientists. but they've also been repeatedly disappointed or betrayed by other parts of the world. and ironically, this is what gave around the opportunity to begin camping the palestinian cause, not because they were in initially so dedicated to the plight of the palestinians. but because it was an effective way of countering american efforts to monopolize
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politics in the region. and also the positions that a number of error per james, that they had bad relations with. we're taking, i'm so yes, the palestinians have had supporters along the way as well. uh, iran. the who sees in the m and as well, but they have not had a major power of backing them in more than largely rhetorical means or providing humanitarian assistance. and unfortunately, of course, that's allowed the conflict to persist and uh, versus to get worse and great suffering for the palestinians. the fundamental problem of course, as you still have roughly equal numbers of palestinian arabs and israel, each is trying to share or cohabitate roughly the same territory. the problem is that one of those groups has all the power and all the political rights, and the other group has little power and no political rights. and as long as that
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is, the situation persists. you're going to have a conflict and you're going to have a conflict that outside powers are going to try and exploit from time to time. so how do you see the future of the westbank given what you just shared? do you think the westbank is going to face the same kind of reality a well, it is a down unless you scale it already. yes. in violence against palestinians has gone up, land seizures have gone up, is rarely settlers are taking more and more land. and again, they're doing it largely with impunity. goes to the united states has decided that's to uh, politically controversial trying to deal with it at the moment. i think you know that there's no real secret here either. it has been israel's project ever since the 6 day war to try and colonize the west bank and created greater israel. that's been pursued by labor governments, by le crude governments, by coalition government consistently. and we now have, and it's really government where yahoo is one of the more moderate members,
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even though of course his entire political career is based on trying to prevent a palestinian state. what this does is it puts the palestinians in a position where they don't really have any options other than resistance. mean, what are their alternatives? they face either extermination or expulsion or permanent apartheid. well, if those are your only 3 choices, because a 2 state solution is an option and political rights within israel as an option, you have nothing left about resistance. and as long as it conforms to the laws of war, worth noting that resistance to a belligerent occupation, which is what is real, is conducting in the west bank is legitimate in international law. and so again, it without a and is really leadership that wants to seize short term advantages, like the ones they currently have and use those to try and develop
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a genuine and legitimate and lasting political solution. i fear that the short term gains will be squandered and both sides are going to suffer more as a result. so it begs the question of whether we're looking at essentially a forever war situation. and i've got a add to that day, one of the interesting bright spots in this story, at least in the united states, were a lot of young people coming out and saying, we don't want to be a part of this that, that we see the world differently that there's a generational shift and looking at some of at least america's foreign policy equities in these issues. i'm not saying that they won or they were influential, but they certainly created a shock protecting american universities. so i'm interested in this question of a forever war that sort of stuck in place for a long period of time. and what does it do to america's politics? what does it do to america's ability to even discuss these issues as we've seen so many cases of, of censorship around this conflict?
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yeah, this is a, i think somebody that should worry lots for americans. and what's happened in the past year is that israel supporters in the united states have started playing real hardball to try and prevent any sorts of criticisms of israel. and so they put enormous pressure on american universities on some media organizations on individuals as well to try and silence them, possibly by basing things illegal. you have universities in acting speech codes that probably violate the 1st amendment, but alone, principles of academic freedom in some state and local governments trying to do similar things as well. this is essentially sort of mccarthy i tactic. but what's most appalling about it is it's being done to try and insulate or protect a country. it's currently engaged in a genocidal campaign and now seems to be expanding it into other areas as well. certainly expanding the war into other areas as well. and i worry that this will inevitably have a backlash in the united states that it will, in fact, re,
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kendall resentment. it will rekindle some of the worst forms and anti semitism you've seen in the past. is people don't like being silenced. they don't like being marginalized, but don't like being bullied. and unfortunately, i think that's what some of israel's more over zealous defenders in the united states have started to do. i think they're playing with fire and i hope that their efforts do not succeed. look, i'm going to ask this uh, an interesting question cuz i think you and i are both a large the and the realist school of foreign policy. but i am interested in what this does because the american brand, when looked at from abroad about western values about civic discourse, about civic justice in inclusion. these things that we largely believe we stand for . and i think part of the question is, can you really promulgate them overseas or not? and, and we can debate that, but how are we as, as americans looking in this moment when we're not when there is such
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a double standard and there is such a hypocrite, see about the freedom of speech and about, um, you know, essentially self determination and civic justice for the victims in this conflict as well. you know, it's good, realistic, we tend to put most of our emphasis on hard power and things like that. but i think there are at least 3 big problems that this situation cause causes to the united states versus you've just alluded, uh, you know, our brand looks terrible. right now. we look deeply, hypocritical, i, you know, if anthony blinking talks about the rules based order, you expect eyes to roll around the room at this point. and that's a problem for the united states. other states are, will pay a larger cost for lining up with us. and will be less likely to do so. a 2nd problem we face, of course, we just were distracted. if you just think of the amount of time energy bandwidth that the guide and administration is spent on the middle least since last october.
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and of course, that means other problems that may be actually much more important than the longer run, i'd get ignored. but the 3rd problem with faces that makes the united states look incompetent. it makes us look like we have no idea of what we're doing or no idea how to get what we want. other states are going to be more willing to take our advice if they think we know what we're doing. and i think we're good at getting it done, so bite and then blanking up and saying for a year that they wanted to cease fire. and they've gotten nowhere precisely know they've been repeatedly stiffed by an ally that's dependent upon their health. this does not make them look particularly competent, and it may even end up costing them the election or costing harris the election, which would be in my view truly a disaster. so again, this does a lot of harm to the united states, even if the stock market is up, even if the american economy is doing pretty well. even with united states is still very powerful and influential in other ways. it's not good for the united states. i
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want to thank political scientists and harvard professor steven walt for joining us today. thank you, steven. a great target is dave. so what's the bottom line? anyone watching the multiple crises in the middle east today will know that is really prime minister. netanyahu looks like he's got a plan where leaders council caution to not problem to conflict, to tap the brakes, but is real just keeps going? will this all payoff is real security and is a ron on weaker likes the day then it was a year ago. many right now are engaged in chest something triumphalism about israel's military successes. but we've seen the tops cut off from austin has a lot in the past. and guess what? they grew back stronger. the fact remains, it is real, shows no interest in turning the real victims of these complex into people with whom they can peacefully co exist. and that means that this tit for tat war is not nearly over. the cycle is going to continue. and that's the bottom line, the
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on counting the cost as geo political tension is wise in the middle east, wants that you cannot make cost for the reach of a surprise financial stimulus in china. but we'll back revive. it's slowing economy plus is involved with facing gifts on mobile currency crisis trouncing the cost on elders 0 the
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safe them even come in as an international insight, corruption, excellence award, denominator here on now. the for me to melinda, all the tell stories on all to 0. there's been a new barrel show of is really a strikes and they roots with explosions of walking the cities southern suburbs into the early hours of sunday morning. the israel's minute, toyota told some residents in the southern south above da here to leave a multiple strikes on the area. of course, extensive damage and recent days launch booms of smoke were visible. often attack close to babies, airports, oregon as well from the liberties capital. and it was very loud from where i was
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standing i made, everyone jumped amazingly, so these sounds really echoing around these buildings quite terrifying for residents civil slats to sent to a route here. now the x rays have been issuing warnings on social media out in arabic for residence to leave these areas and say they're about to bomb them. but a lot of residents are saying that they say the problem one building and then they fall. another one, this would trust in what they're doing. they also tell a residence to stand about 500 meters away, but i mean, you saw on, on your tvs that this huge explosions taking place. i don't many people don't trust, but 500 meters is even enough. to sound, i mean, as i said, i was standing a few kilometers away and it was incredibly loud from here. so of course, very frightening. at least 18 palestinians of entails. and it is really
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a strike on a mosque in their will by law in central garza, it will shelton displays people neil oxer hospital. some of those injured in the attack has been seriously wounded. is very strikes have killed more than 50 palestinians across cause a since saturday morning, a vaccination campaign against inboxes under wayne goma in the democratic republic of congo. the cities being hit the hardest by an outbreak house officials a record of more than 50000 cases. the disease is killed almost $1000.00 people since the start of the former us president donald trump's hills, a campaign, riley, and butler, pennsylvania. that's the town where we survived in assassination attempts nearly 3 months ago. 2 those are the headlines, the news continues here and i'll just 0 of to be occupied with bank the other front . i'll be back in about the 2 minutes. the
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the to the next week is an unprecedented now, in volume of, of wireless. it was picked against by the city and state. this one is, is i would say they ripped it in order to the port entire communities from where they're living. it's just something which we started to see several years ago. but in the last weeks, we see it's 131415,
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but it's in community is and there are dozens of other communities which are fretting by centers and by the military. it's important to emphasize that except there's 10 military this is something which we haven't seen with begging with us the internet 50 something years. the in 1928 in israel. i think like science to palestine sending 75 percent of the policy and population fleeting. never to be able to return what remained were 2 small parts of historic palestine. one part is to the strip and the 2nd part is the west bank. and in 1967,
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israel occupied those 2 places, but they then started to build. illegal is rarely settlements, and there are now roughly $200.00 illegal is rarely settlements that are in the west bank. and these new legal settlements have about 750000 is really living on why since that they are illegal because they're classified as such under international law. and we've already seen that in certain areas that the settlers have already managed to take over swats of palestinian land that they were unable to take over before the
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stores. attention. it's now shifted to the guys and strip as it should be because they're jealous. i happening, they're the sellers are using this opportunity to carry out their own times and it's not just the sellers. we deep. i'd be remiss if we just somehow made it out that it's just the sellers. this is the sellers. this is the army, this is government policy. it's the sellers were implementing government policy. they're not acting contradiction to the be seeing that settlers have been attacking palestinians in these areas that are not under the control of the palestinian authority. there's been so many attacks that the u. n. has said that this is the highest level of subtler attacks that they've ever recorded. the regularly settlers protected by soldiers. it means that settlers retain late,
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burned down all of drives, or a tech palestinians in the west bank soldiers or the 10 to blind. i literally watching when this is happening, all the help house and the fee now is that many more palestinians will be killed, but also is many villages will be forced to leave and i have no way to go. and that's an outrageous outcome. the for the say that's to effect as island is built in component and base really, is there any semen enterprise, something which goes to the very foundation of this enterprise? none of these ready, so i'm into with bang, could exist and would be established without violence. so now this violent is, can be invited to parking on the institution of so called state violence and then to privatize sutler is violent. and both of them together work for many, many, many years in order to take as much as possible of plants and to get put us in and out of the area
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the little. hi, steven han, another down. i'm sorry for the, the person with open infinity touch on why they told you monitors were still yada. yo my does the sound of 2 of us, but they're testing. yeah. and i'm sure they're tested on the, well, i get done isn't how heavy i know. but they as it how wide you would data on their inside me. so it'd be take your money because you might, if i'm on your on and i'd good the mobile inertial model. when i'm in the number for sure. i mean, he was in the house and couldn't go to the home for them. so it mean took your mind
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well, i mean, yeah, and that's how you guys are all on if you would be out. and then once they go hide the flow of new stuff and then still getting to the place with the, the, the, the opposing hands on the ground are basically helpless. and they know that i believe they are posting. and that's are so afraid of course. and because the settlers are armed, so they won't site the entire community the from their homes. and i'll say they, they gave enough, they know they have no protection, they know they can protect themselves. and so they have to leave. and this is for some of the transfer, right? the 1st book transfer is making an environment the course of environments
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that the people tend to leave from creating a reality where people can sleep under land. and this is a force of the transfer as much as the other, and this is both the world, the . there was a huge expansion in violence in the west bank. and settlers are in power, and now there's no doubt 2023 seen the most right wing government in the country's history. that's true. but it's a mistake to believe and it's in yahoo is simply is the ultimate ring master here is prime minister and he's ultimately responsible for the problem guys, fast data and just to use the
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center to. but if there was for any of the meeting with us, so i might be able to say on monday, a lot of my vehicle stuff and i'm fairly sealed off not thought it was you had one guy to have the last of the nothing to do about the manager of the us yet, and he's not in the sample. see for the sort the $79.00 in a fit i be at 11. my dad has come out and i'm up at the little farm and there is some, some in the field. so hopefully it will discuss it. i don't know if the fish i'm it should have come in by the me the eh, in the them, i know i'm going to talk to you about the music that you will feel and that will
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have plumbing based on that whole. but yeah, how do you happen to have a family and we're happy about that. highly entropy. so we with the pallet with a pallet, little the, so much of a lot of items, just the just the box just about just it as a really who is it as able to show it? uh, unless you've done somebody was hoping wizards on the follow up. and now who do i have to? i can come onto the letter means a lot of the the hey, to leave him after october of this event, you and he brought the money, but the thing is with the team i was detained and tortured by these are in the military. and those are the zip codes in an army uniform. i was beaten and kicked
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this the sped on me the sexually had asked me, the really thought showed me for 14 hours now. i see a lot of reviews coming out from the soldiers. they found themselves torturing bostonians, dehumanizing, but of thing in between, these are the the of the assignment is a lot of livings under the category when they're looking down and under the
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military supremacy they suffered from lack of food that the 4th a visa for, from a you know that like a safety that they feel that they make killed them any time they have to the 5, they are intimidated. the fans don't get access to, i'm belongs to, to us. but those, it's a kind of a, b and j and without protection. and without the food with intimidation all the time, and with adults and violence from the latest, it goes from time to 9 the the the, the full of good. how's of give it in the whole community,
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this lady in no less than the issue of jelly. you similar follow up with an interview with a slightly different a slight lessons using a slightly more little stephanie hulu, hulu, or hulu. and sort of, you know, gosh, a month to month with telling me that that that helps me with us getting uninstalled and started helping me more than double click the button the either the, the computer. yeah. and the most nothing but the i like i know the thing i know about it and the shuttle i been a by you and you. oh i she, i know in the unemployment issue. and i'm assuming that either i had the enemy's gone. who the valet, how much is that my fish rebuilding was stolen? how come in to have the hold of me? hold on. i know. i know the most open and dumb said i would you and because i like it, i'm a little head. i'm really, i've been doing badly homes and doing the been asked who are still in the put a new way out there still at home stolen ocean v a study who wished it like to
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share with the man? no, no, not image with us. we all know most of the hell of it too much. the dog in the west bank, the settlers are going wild attacking post indians with the is really soldiers watching it, sometimes eating it in other parts of the west bank where the, the housing authority is present. the army has come in on a number of occasions. arrested people, dollars home. nobody's protected, those palestinians either. so there's nobody who's protecting us. this is the problem. we are stateless. refugee population, protected by no one will see that what their ultimate aim is, is to get rid of as many palestinians as possible. take as much of palestinian land
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as possible. and they have not been secret about it each and every level of the government has been clear about what it is that they want. and the world just sharing the what are we seeing that asked me or is that the most racist nationalist violence, criminal governments ever. and israel, this government obviously has members which are openly declaring, but they are supporting the protection of the state of communities and but a stimulus from, from what they declare, what value would they be fine. and the land of israel,
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the, the ultimate vision he, uh, really, i fi is 2 things. and it is either a jewish via credit stage way of palestinians are given a choice. you either accept our rule forever during the pa side stage, or you believe forcibly or otherwise, and that's frankly a k plan of one of these rails k ministers not rich the before october 7, there was a discussion by the fire bodies riley government. this she had to do some more weapons to is riley settlers to apparently protect themselves from palestinians. october 7 happens and there's been lots of footage of you to not being of the one of the senior is riley fire. right. ministers,
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literally giving weapons to set low. some of them nice to extreme settlers who it's framed is if the palestinians at the violent ones, the palestinians are resisting the colonization of the land. and the idea that you have most atlas being and you know already what is a low less wild west type situation is picture fine up there is the consequences we're seeing is that those that are setting fire to, to home was the newest bank homes of, of those between communities, those, the city and communities and the, the center is coming in the people just physically. it is still seeing them and it goes up to the arm settlers. the shooting posting is to this the,
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the settlers, once they've been recruited, the military is a, are surfacing in the military of the same places where he lives. in other words, you know, what's the name of the things i've never lived in, and it's how the next day can be now, the policeman embodied. just imagine, okay, this is how it works. ok. but means that the, the private, the violence is no becoming institution. now it's the kind of do the same. people are doing the same thing which i've done before. it's more and with uniforms. the little bit just uh we just, i just uh, i done a double good thing. oh i looked on the did so to help with the pull. no, did it worked and the she had the little bit on the
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control. good little fish had the was good. i will definitely isaiah to settle the bab, we'll definitely do the full little venture. when goes let's the gardening t. uh well i to hon. well, also that with me, what's on the check and said you don't have to never see a lot of a subordinate and i look for orders now. someone will by sell it. and i know this is lynn helped me in a kind of shirts of the animal. somebody will it in the low of my multiple bucks or the bad? the one that i for the one who by this side. little highlander for then why then way feel government followed you. bought the other $1.00 you put them in. was to
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have to believe in friendship. yes. i mean, yeah, i said of, well i'm in there. the like in took leave and when i did not collect sort of had this with us, we had a little 1000000 from the, from the home of us. so i mean of the, from the move it to when a shuttle, the for me is then over to look to see if i don't know who might be some horse electrical locus moment genuine, getting them with the color. so i'm listening because it a heavy mist difficult and the cover for letting me levels them and getting them know somebody like getting them to who talked the pursuit had that would been the been into the cost of them and to show if and a hazel salvage this how these with me, how this, what it's about letting the ship this more has in that email affordable, but they may have to shape, keep up the loan. and as in vision,
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as the enrollment on the news of sales are quoting for the protection. what according to make, is an account a bit of what it's crime here and that was the bank is what it is not defending. it says it's defending, gets a commission, it's about type and it's a promise. the what is so infuriating is that much the international community, and when i always say that, i mean essentially you with any of you doing nothing as if somehow joe biden or anthony blinking on a you official asking or begging these riley's to do something the is going to help
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was if history started on october 7th, this has been going on long before october 7. and what's happening since is the fruits of those inactions that not to the international community has done nothing . the many countries would like to come jam. what they're seeing in the westbank and busts, and they're not going into actions. the united states giving age is actually sending weaponry. it's actually sent its own troops or 2000 troops in addition to the money and the troops there also giving
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israel diplomatic cover. and there being the diplomatic bully, the, the, it comes down to the idea that way, the way in the international community, a willing to accept israel becoming a full blind see a credit space. now he's ro promotes itself globally as a thriving democracy, which i've always thought was nonsense because if you're a jew show, but it's, you know, it's essentially your trade. it is a 2nd class citizen. but in the short to medium, tim, i see a that israel is relatively comfortable in its position because i do not see any serious international pressure to change that the
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funding said and had that it will be less than a plan that not to follow. so i mean, mission best level of at the little me they're going to follow us any and leave us with me home. and i have a pallet and actually i mean all of who i had the issue as much of that follow seems a shuttle, it should've all a issue. that was the initiatives and i went ahead and open it as i see so often no plans have the time be including wide open up of us to meet it a month in your own lives. add to accept and keep. i'm headed to the
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my father was born in 1930 and so here we are. in the year 2023, the 75 years after the next. my father was 9 during the next law. my son is now 9. i know know exactly the feelings that my grandmother had in 1948 the decisions that my grandmother had to take in 1948 the feeling of impending due that she felt in 1948. the fear, the worry. the fear of not only your own life, but the destruction of your community, of you as a people of your town of your every thing. i now feel that and understand that it's no longer just something academic for me. i few live
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with every fiber of might be i feel the it had a lot of that. let's have a look at the weather across north america over the next few days. and as you can see, it is a largely quiet picture for much of the us will. however, see the development of some heavy rain that will start to pull into the deep cell. really a close to florida panhandle as well. places that don't really need that rain. we'll see it over the weekend. now across canada, it's a different story and got some very width and windy weather with gusts of
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a 100 kilometers per hour. weaving across from eastern areas with heavy rain stretching down across the great lakes. we'll see that push its way across into more eastern areas. bringing a chance of rain to places like new york city on monday that behind that across from west. and there is a good, another way the system pulling in that's going to bring some wintry weather to british columbia and some heavier rain that will touch down into the pacific northwest. and is a washington state on monday because most central areas. and of course, it doesn't, southwest, it is a story of heat. we will see some whatsoever. however, touching up into the deep south. and this, that rain, moving across the florida panhandle, pushing into the bahamas as well. it's a very wet picture around the gulf of mexico. on monday from a the narrative to media was from propaganda to the changing face of journalism. i
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have never seen a leave media consensus change. so click finish me post the codes, the media hold on just the to the the israel, alicia's, the new it strikes and living on the capital of 20 people in the south of the city to evacuate the somebody, the miller, this is all to 0 life from the law also coming up at least 18 palestinians have been killed in central garza off to the mostly with sheltering in was his vine is ready to strike the show of
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solidarity for palestinians in garza from paris to new york to.

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