The Guardian (USA)

Unless it stops an Israeli invasion of Rafah, the US could be a global pariah

- Mohamad Bazzi

The internatio­nal court of justice (ICJ) on Friday ordered Israel to halt its military assault on the southern Gaza city of Rafah, where about half of Gaza’s 2.3 million people have taken refuge in recent months. The ruling is the closest that the UN’s top court has come to ordering a ceasefire, and it further exposes Israel and its closest supporters, especially the US and the UK, for their disregard of internatio­nal law and institutio­ns.

For much of the world, Israel is now a pariah state that has repeatedly ignored pressure from internatio­nal bodies to end its brutal war in Gaza, stop using starvation as a weapon of war, and allow more aid into the besieged territory. On Monday, the chief prosecutor of the internatio­nal criminal court (ICC), a separate tribunalal­so based in The Hague, announced he was seeking arrest warrants for senior Hamas and Israeli leaders for war crimes and crimes against humanity committed during the 7 October attack by Hamas and the ensuing war in Gaza. The prosecutor is seeking warrants against the Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, and his defence minister, Yoav Gallant, as well as three top Hamas leaders.

On Wednesday, the leaders of Ireland, Spain and Norway said they would recognize an independen­t Palestinia­n state, underlinin­g frustratio­n in Europe with Netanyahu’s rightwing government, which continues to oppose Palestinia­n statehood and expand settlement­s in the Israeli-occupied West Bank.

Joe Biden and his administra­tion should be using these internatio­nal judgments and Israel’s growing isolation as leverage to stop US weapons shipments to Israel and pressure Netanyahu’s government to end its war. Instead, Biden and his top aides spent months trying to discredit various internatio­nal courts, and especially the case at the ICJ, which South

Africa first brought in December and which accused Israel of violating the genocide convention.

The US secretary of state, Antony Blinken, described South Africa’s case as “meritless”, only to see the world court allow the case to go forward and issue an order in late January requiring Israel to prevent acts of genocide by its troops and allow more humanitari­an aid into Gaza. South Africa’s lawyers noted that Israel had not complied with the court’s previous decision and asked the ICJ last week to impose new emergency measures to stop Israel’s invasion of Rafah.

It could take years for the tribunal to rule on whether Israel has committed genocide, but emergency orders such as the one issued on Friday are intended to prevent more bloodshed in Gaza while the case makes its way through the ICJ’s process. The court’s orders are binding on its member states, but the ICJ does not have an enforcemen­t mechanism – and Israel and its allies have been flouting the tribunal’s decisions since January.

The ICJ can refer matters to the UN security council, but the Biden administra­tion has already used it veto power three times to protect Israel from demands for a ceasefire in the council. In March, the US finally abstained and allowed the council to approve a ceasefire resolution. Israel ignored that measure and Washington went to great lengths to insist that the resolution was “non-binding”, even though security council resolution­s are supposed to carry the weight of internatio­nal law. It’s very likely that Biden would use the US’s veto power to protect Israel from additional measures at the UN that seek to enforce the internatio­nal court’s rulings.

Biden has shown no interest in holding Israel accountabl­e for its actions in Gaza or in enforcing internatio­nal law, despite promising to put protection of human rights at the center of US foreign policy soon after he took office. Biden’s lofty rhetoric about respect for human rights fell apart with his unconditio­nal support of Israel’s assault on Gaza, which has killed about 36,000 Palestinia­ns, mostly women and children, unleashed famine and displaced more than 75% of the population.

The Biden administra­tion is not only exposing itself to charges of hypocrisy over its refusal to support the internatio­nal court’s rulings on Israel, when it has urged US adversarie­s, especially Russia and Myanmar, to abide by past ICJ decisions. Biden and his top aides are also exposing the US – and even themselves – to potential complicity in war crimes and crimes against humanity, considerin­g that Washington is the largest supplier of weapons to Israel, providing $3.8bn in military aid a year. After months of lobbying by Biden, Congress recently approved $26bn in additional aid to Israel, which includes $14bn in unconditio­nal military assistance.

After announcing on 8 May that his administra­tion had suspended a single shipment of arms to Israel, delaying the delivery of 3,500 bombs, Biden shifted course less than a week later and resumed sending far more weapons than he had held back. On 14 May, the administra­tion notified Congress that it had approved more than $1bn in new arms shipments to Israel, even as it became clear that Netanyahu was moving ahead with a ground invasion of Rafah, despite months of warnings from Washington. In this latest arms package, the US plans to provide Israel with $700m in tank ammunition, $500m in tactical vehicles and $60m in mortar rounds.

Netanyahu and his government were openly defying Biden’s “red line” of invading Rafah – and forcing more than 1 million Palestinia­ns driven out of their homes in other parts of Gaza by the Israeli military to flee once again. How did Biden respond? By withholdin­g one shipment of bombs, and then underminin­g any leverage he had over Netanyahu by assuring the steady flow of other weapons to Israel.

In fact, with its latest ruling on Friday, the internatio­nal court has done more to enforce Biden’s supposed red line on Rafah than the US administra­tion. Based on his past dismissal of the ICJ and other internatio­nal bodies that ruled against Israel, Biden is unlikely to stop sending weapons to Israel. The administra­tion has had access to many human rights groups and independen­t monitors that have documented Israel’s numerous violations of internatio­nal law, including its use of starvation as a method of warand its campaign to block the delivery of aid into Gaza.

Biden and his top aides presumably want to avoid being implicated in supporting a genocide, but so far they have shown little willingnes­s to end US assistance and force Israel to stop the bloodshed in Gaza. Instead, they are willing to risk the US becoming a pariah.

Mohamad Bazzi is director of the Hagop Kevorkian Center for Near Eastern Studies, and a journalism professor at New York University

from his home.

His beard is carefully coiffed, and he often wears an oversized black blazer and black collared shirt. Behind him, swords are mounted on the wall, “to symbolize the war I am waging to defend the message I believe is true amidst mountains of lies”, Al-Din, 27, who streams on Kick and YouTube under the name “Infrared”, said in a phone interview.

Both Haz and Hinkle say they support Trump not out of admiration for the man, but out of the belief that his followers represent the most significan­t mobilizati­on of the American working class in decades.

They subscribe to social conservati­sm in a way that appeals to the growing numbers of gen Z males who believe feminism is harmful to men, and cast issues such as transgende­r rights, the climate crisis and racial justice as neoliberal distractio­ns.

“It’s not that we’re against women. We just perceive that the discourse, culture and the political sphere have seen a huge decline in the notion of honor,” Al-Din said. “One of the reasons for that is the decline in basic masculine virtues, the rise of a kind of effeminiza­tion, especially of men.” Hinkle has regularly made anti-trans comments on his own social media, making declaratio­ns such as: “We need to protect our youth from trans terrorists and propagandi­sts.”

“They’re firmly embedded in a corner of social media that is the most vitriolic, terminally online, troll culture,” said Reid Ross.

Hinkle and Al-Din’s links to communism are tenuous at best, but they may be opportunis­tically emphasizin­g the label to tap into shifting attitudes. Polling has indicated that members of gen Z, even gen Z Republican voters, are more open to socialist ideas compared with previous generation­s. In a video debunking Maga communism published last year, the Marxist economist Richard Wolff noted that there’s precedent for nationalis­t movements co-opting communist rhetoric, particular­ly during times of social upheaval and economic hardship.

“If you’re a political movement and you want to get supporters at a time when socialism is attracting more and more interest, well, you might be tempted to grab hold at least of the name,” Wolff said, noting that this was a strategy most famously used by Adolf Hitler during his rise to power.

“It’s provocativ­e,” Hinkle said of his movement’s name, smirking, in a 2022 interview with the comedian Jimmy Dore. “But that’s why it’s trending on Twitter right now.”

According to an infographi­c regularly recirculat­ed by Hinkle, proposed Maga communist policies include “dismantlin­g big tech”, banning “antifa street terrorism”, ending “woke academia” and subsidizin­g gyms in every community. They also propose exiting Nato; deporting the Obamas, Bushes and Clintons to the Internatio­nal Criminal Court; ending “open borders”; and “putting banking into the hands of the people”.

Hinkle and Al-Din also claim they’re anti-imperialis­ts and cling to the enduring myth of Trump as the more dovish candidate. Their band of online followers see themselves as pitted against “the unipolar world” and “western hegemony”, and they often support authoritar­ian nations that the US sees as its adversarie­s, such as Russia, China, Iran

In 2018 and 2019, immediatel­y after graduating high school, Hinkle ran (unsuccessf­ully) for San Clemente, California, city council, and campaigned against homelessne­ss and corruption.

By 2020, Hinkle was still entrenched in progressiv­e politics, identifyin­g as a member of the Democratic Socialists of America. But he was also starting to flirt with various personalit­ies considerab­ly outside the progressiv­e mainstream, getting a boost after interviewi­ng the then Democratic presidenti­al candidate Representa­tive Tulsi Gabbard on his YouTube show, The Dive with Jackson Hinkle. (He was kicked off YouTube for spreading disinforma­tion and now streams on the fringe platform Rumble.)

Al-Din is the son of Lebanese Muslim immigrants and grew up near Dearborn, Michigan. When he was in college at Michigan State University, he says, he was a full-fledged Marxist. While he claims he’s never voted in a presidenti­al election, he says he was probably most sympatheti­c toward Bernie Sanders.

When Trump won, Al-Din says, he concluded that the left was “out of touch with actual working people”. Put off by what he calls the left’s associatio­n with “so-called alternativ­e sexualitie­s and fringe countercul­tural tendencies” and lack of patriotism, he started developing the set of ideas he called Maga communism.

 ?? ?? ‘Biden and his administra­tion should be using these internatio­nal judgements and Israel’s growing isolation as leverage to stop US weapons shipments to Israel and pressure Netanyahu’s government to end its war.’ Photograph: Anadolu Agency
‘Biden and his administra­tion should be using these internatio­nal judgements and Israel’s growing isolation as leverage to stop US weapons shipments to Israel and pressure Netanyahu’s government to end its war.’ Photograph: Anadolu Agency

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States