Arab News

America is dropping aid to Gaza by air? What?!

- HASSAN BIN YOUSSEF YASSIN Hassan bin Youssef Yassin worked closely with Saudi Arabia’s petroleum ministers, Abdullah Tariki and Ahmed Zaki Yamani, from 1959 to 1967. He led the Saudi Informatio­n Office in Washington from 1972 to 1981 and served with the A

Is it really possible that the most powerful country in the world could be unable to deliver aid to millions of Gazans starving to death other than by dropping aid from the sky? Is the US so dwarfed by its Israeli ally that it cannot see its aid driven straight to Gazans in need, instead of using perhaps the most expensive food delivery system in the world? Maybe they could call Uber Eats or DHL to get it delivered? What a tragi-comedy.

America’s subservien­ce to a belligeren­t Israel today made me think back to 1983 when a single US soldier stood up to a column of Israel tanks in defense of America’s reputation and humanitari­an values. When the American-made Israeli tanks did not heed warnings to halt at the perimeter drawn by the Multi-National Force in Lebanon, US Marine Corps Capt. Charles B. Johnson climbed atop an Israeli tank with his pistol drawn, telling the Israeli captain in no uncertain terms that he would be able to cross the line only “over my dead body.” The Israeli tanks turned back, and America’s power and moral compass were upheld through the actions of a single soldier. Another US soldier sought to wake up America and its Israeli ally last week when he self-immolated in front of the Israeli Embassy in Washington, DC, to remind the world of America’s values and compassion, seeking to prevent the worst from happening to the devastated, and now starving, civilians of Gaza. Unlike during the Vietnam War, when news of Vietnamese monks self-immolating in Saigon made the headlines of every newspaper, the news of this soldier’s death and moral courage was little more than a footnote in the news. It was not the power of the gun but the power of love and commitment to humanity speaking, ignored. In 1983, even President Ronald Reagan praised the US soldier who had stopped the Israeli column of tanks. Today, the current US administra­tion bows to an Israel hell-bent on death and destructio­n at a terrifying scale, ignoring the bravery and humanity of those who condemn America’s silence.

On one hand we have the commitment of a single American patriot ready to forfeit his life for the respect of the humanity of others, and on the other we have a deaf leadership that has seemingly forgotten the values that the US was establishe­d upon. What we all need is an alarm clock of empathy to wake us up. Remember the US soldiers who entered Paris and Germany at the close of World War II with a smile, the power of hope and a stick of chewing gum? They offered their erstwhile adversarie­s the Marshall Plan to rebuild and asked them to join the community of caring nations. We all still remember how the US gave the world hope with a wink and a smile.

America, you have deep roots ready to produce the ripest fruit of friendship, understand­ing and empathy for all peoples of the world.

This is the America we want to see again, but today, it seems, something is not connecting. The soldier who self-immolated last week did so because he could not stand by as his country made him and his fellow Americans complicit in the killing and starving of millions of Gazans. He sought to pinch dead nerves that had become desensitiz­ed to such callousnes­s and evil.

America, please wake up, you have so much going for you and so much potential to make the world more humane and understand­ing. You have the power to do what that Marine Corps captain did all by himself, telling Israel “over my dead body” and seeing their tanks turn back. He was ready to die for the sake of humanity also. These two brave US soldiers reminding America of its values deserve to be honored and listened to by every American. They bear a bright torch that we cannot ignore. That is America.

America, you have deep roots ready to produce the ripest fruit of friendship, understand­ing and empathy for all peoples of the world. This is the America we want to see again, but today, it seems, something is not connecting.

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