Trump didn't invent the Gaza ethnic cleansing plan. It's been US policy since 
2007

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s intention from day one of his 
"revenge" attack on Gaza, launched 16 months ago, was either ethnic cleansing 
or genocide in Gaza.

His ally in genocide for the next 15 months was former US President Joe Biden. 
His ally in ethnic cleansing is current US President Donald Trump.

Biden provided the 2,000lb bombs for the genocide. Trump is reportedly 
providing an even larger munition – the 11-ton MOAB, or massive ordnance air 
blast bomb, with a mile-wide radius – to further incentivise the population’s 
exodus.

Biden claimed that Israel was helping the people of Gaza by "carpet bombing" 
the enclave – in his words – to "eradicate" Hamas. Trump claims he is helping 
the people of Gaza by "cleaning them out" – in his words – from the resulting 
"demolition site".

Biden called the destruction of 70 percent of Gaza’s buildings "self defence". 
Trump calls the imminent destruction of the remaining 30 percent "all hell 
breaking loose".

Biden claimed to be "working tirelessly for a ceasefire" while encouraging 
Israel to continue the murder of children month after month.

Trump claims to have negotiated a ceasefire, even as he has turned a blind eye 
to Israel violating the terms of that ceasefire: by continuing to fire on 
Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank; by refusing entry into Gaza of vital 
aid trucks; by allowing in almost none of the promised tents or mobile homes; 
by denying many hundreds of maimed Palestinians treatment abroad; by blocking 
the return of Palestinians to their homes in northern Gaza; and by failing to 
engage with the second phase of the ceasefire negotiations.

Those Israeli violations, although widely reported by the media as Hamas 
"claims", were confirmed to the New York Times by three Israeli officials and 
two mediators.

In other words, Israel has broken the agreement on every count – and Trump has 
stood foursquare behind this most favoured client state every bit as much as 
Biden did before him.

'Hell breaking loose'

As Israel knew only too well in breaching the ceasefire, Hamas only ever had 
one point of leverage to try to enforce the agreement: to refuse to release 
more hostages. Which is precisely what the Palestinian group announced last 
Monday it would do until Israel began honouring the agreement.

In a familiar double act, Israel and Washington then put on a show of mock 
outrage.

Trump lost no time escalating the stakes dramatically. He gave Israel – or 
maybe the US, he was unclear – the green light to "let hell break out", 
presumably meaning the resumption of the genocide.

This will happen not only if Hamas refuses to free the three scheduled hostages 
by the deadline of noon this Saturday. Trump has insisted that Hamas is now 
expected to release all of the hostages.

The US president said he would no longer accept "dribs and drabs" being 
released over the course of the six-week, first phase of the ceasefire. In 
other words, Trump is violating the very terms of the initial ceasefire his own 
team negotiated.

Clearly, neither Netanyahu nor Trump have been trying to save the agreement. 
They are working tirelessly to blow it up.

Israel’s Haaretz newspaper reported as much last weekend. Israeli sources 
revealed that Netanyahu’s goal was to "derail" the ceasefire before it could 
reach the second stage when Israeli troops are supposed to fully withdraw from 
the enclave and reconstruction begin.

"Once Hamas realizes there won't be a second stage, they may not complete the 
first," a source told the paper.

Hamas insisted on a gradual release of hostages precisely to buy time, knowing 
that Israel would be keen to restart the slaughter as soon as it got the 
hostages home.

The Palestinians of Gaza are back to square one.

Either accept that they will be ethnically cleansed so that Trump and his 
billionaire friends can cash in on reinventing the enclave as the "Riviera of 
the Middle East", paid for by stealing the revenues from Gaza’s gas fields, or 
face a return to the genocide.

Quiet part out loud

As should have been clear, Netanyahu only agreed to Washington’s "ceasefire" 
because it was never real. It was a pause so the US could recalibrate from a 
Biden genocide narrative rooted in the language of "humanitarianism" and 
"security" to Trump’s far more straightforward tough-guy act.

Now it’s all about the "art of the deal" and real-estate development 
opportunities.

But of course Trump’s plan to "own" Gaza and then "clean it out" has left his 
allies in Europe – in truth, his satraps – squirming in their seats.

As ever, Trump has a disturbing habit of saying the quiet part out loud. Of 
tearing away the already-battered veneer of western respectability. Of making 
everyone look bad.

The truth is that over 15 months Israel failed to achieve either of its stated 
objectives in Gaza – eradicating Hamas and securing the return of the hostages 
– because neither was ever really the goal.

Even Biden’s secretary of state, Antony Blinken, had to concede that Israel’s 
mass slaughter had served only to recruit as many fighters to Hamas as it had 
killed.

And Israeli military whistleblowers revealed to the website +972 last week that 
Israel had killed many of its hostages by using indiscriminate US-supplied 
bunker-buster bombs.

These bombs had not only generated huge blast areas but also served effectively 
as chemical weapons, flooding Hamas’ tunnels with carbon monoxide, asphyxiating 
the hostages.
The indifference of the Israeli leadership to the hostages’ fate was confirmed 
by Israel’s former defence minister, Yoav Gallant, in an interview with Israeli 
TV Channel 12.

He admitted that the army had invoked the so-called Hannibal directive during 
Hamas’ breakout of Gaza on 7 October 2023, allowing soldiers to kill Israelis 
rather than risk letting them be taken hostage by the Palestinian group.

These matters, which throw a different light on Israel’s actions in Gaza, have, 
of course, been almost completely blanked out by the western establishment 
media.

Damage limitation

Israel’s plan from the outset was the ethnic cleansing of Gaza. And now Trump 
is making that explicit.

So explicit, in fact, that the media have been forced to go into frenzied 
damage-limitation mode, employing one of the most intense psy-ops against their 
own publics on record.

Every euphemism under the sun has been resorted to to avoid making clear that 
Trump and Israel are preparing to ethnically cleanse whoever’s left of the 2.3 
million Palestinians living in Gaza.

The BBC speaks of "resettling", "relocating" and "moving away” the population 
of Gaza.


n other reports, Palestinians are inexplicably on the brink of “leaving”.

The New York Times refers to ethnic cleansing positively as Trump’s 
"development plan", while Reuters indifferently calls it "moving out" Gaza’s 
population.

Western capitals and their compliant media have been put in this uncomfortable 
position because Washington’s client states in the Middle East have refused to 
play ball with Israel and Trump’s ethnic cleansing plan.

Despite the ever-mounting slaughter, Egypt has refused to open its short border 
with Gaza to let the bombed, starved population pour into neighbouring Sinai.

There was, of course, never any question of Israel being expected to allow 
Gaza’s families to return to the lands from which they were originally 
expelled, at gunpoint, in 1948 in order to create a self-declared Jewish state.

Then, as now, the western powers colluded in Israel’s ethnic cleansing 
operations. This is the historical context western media prefer to gloss over – 
even on the rare occasions when they concede that there is any relevant 
background other than a presumed Palestinian barbarism. Instead the media 
resort to evasive terminology about "cycles of violence" and "historic 
enmities".

Backed into a corner by Trump’s outbursts of the past few days, western 
politicians and the media have preferred to suggest that his administration’s 
"development plan" for Gaza is actually an innovation.

In truth, however, the president isn’t advancing anything new in demanding that 
Gaza’s Palestinians be ethnically cleansed. What’s different is that he is 
being unusually – and inadvisably – open about a long-standing policy.

Israel has always harboured plans to expel Palestinians from Gaza to Egypt and 
from the West Bank to Jordan.

But more to the point, as was noted by Middle East Eye a decade ago, Washington 
has been fully on board with the Gaza half of the expulsion project since the 
latter stages of George W Bush’s second presidency, in 2007. For anyone 
struggling with maths, that was 18 years ago.

Every US president, including Barack Obama, has leant on Egypt’s leader of the 
time to allow Israel to drive Gaza’s population into Sinai – and each one has 
been rebuffed.

Open secret

This open secret is not widely known for exactly the same reason that every 
western pundit and politician is now pretending to be appalled that Trump is 
actually advancing it.

Why? Because it looks bad – all the more so couched in Trump’s vulgar 
real-estate sales pitch in the middle of a supposed ceasefire.

Western leaders had hoped to bring about the ethnic cleansing of Gaza with more 
decorum – in a “humanitarian” way that would have been more effective in duping 
western publics and maintaining the West’s claim to be upholding civilised 
values against a supposed Palestinian barbarity.

Since 2007 Washington and Israel’s joint ethnic cleansing project has been 
known as the "Greater Gaza Plan".

Israel’s siege of the tiny enclave, which began in late 2006, was designed to 
create so much misery and poverty in the tiny enclave that the people there 
would clamour to be allowed out.

This was when Israel began formulating a so-called "starvation diet" for the 
people of Gaza, counting the calories to keep them alive but only barely.

Israel’s conception of Gaza was that it was like a tube of toothpaste that 
could be squeezed. As soon as Egypt relented and opened the border, the 
population would flood into Sinai out of desperation.

Every Egyptian president was bullied and bribed to give in: Hosni Mubarak, 
Mohamed Morsi, and General Abdel Fattah el-Sisi. They all refused.

Egypt was under no illusions about what was at stake after 7 October 2023. It 
fully understood that Israel’s levelling of Gaza was designed to squeeze the 
tube so hard the top would be forced off.

Pressure on Egypt

>From the outset, officials like Giora Eiland, Israel’s former national 
>security adviser, stated publicly that the goal was to make Gaza "a place 
>where no human being can exist".

Just a week into Israel’s slaughter, in October 2023, military spokesperson 
Amir Avivi told the BBC that Israel could not ensure the safety of civilians in 
Gaza. He added: "They need to move south, out to the Sinai Peninsula."

The next day, Danny Ayalon, a Netanyahu confidant and former Israeli ambassador 
to the US, amplified the point: "There is almost endless space in the Sinai 
Desert… We and the international community will prepare the infrastructure for 
tent cities."

He concluded: "Egypt will have to play ball."

Israel’s thinking was divulged in a leaked policy draft from its intelligence 
ministry. It proposed that, after their expulsion, Gaza's population would 
initially be housed in tent cities, before permanent communities could be built 
in the north of Sinai.

At the same time, the Financial Times reported that Netanyahu was lobbying the 
European Union on the idea of driving the enclave’s Palestinians into Sinai 
under cover of war.

Some EU members, including the Czech Republic and Austria, were said to have 
been receptive and floated the idea at a meeting of member states. An unnamed 
European diplomat told the FT: "Now is the time to put increased pressure on 
the Egyptians to agree."

Meanwhile, the Biden administration supplied the bombs to maintain the pressure.

Sisi was only too aware of what Egypt was up against: a concerted western plan 
to ethnically cleanse Gaza. None of it had anything to do with Trump, who was 
more than a year away from being elected president.

In mid-October 2023, days into the slaughter, Sisi responded in a press 
conference with German Chancellor Olaf Scholz: "What is happening now in Gaza 
is an attempt to force civilian residents to take refuge and migrate to Egypt, 
which should not be accepted."

That was precisely why he dedicated so much effort to shoring up the short 
border shared between Gaza and Sinai both before and after Israel’s genocide 
began.

Peace sales pitch

Part of what makes Trump’s sales pitch so surreal is that he is half-heartedly 
sticking to the original script: trying to make the plan sound vaguely 
humanitarian.
At the same time as re-arming Israel and warning of "all hell breaking loose", 
he has spoken of finding "parcels of land" in Egypt and Jordan where the people 
of Gaza "can live very happily and very safely".

He has contrasted that with their current plight: "They are being killed there 
at levels that nobody’s ever seen. No place in the world is as dangerous as the 
Gaza Strip… They are living in hell."

That seems to be Trump’s all-too-revealing way of describing the genocide 
Israel denies it is carrying out and the one the US denies it is arming.

But the talk of helping Gaza’s population is just the rhetorical leftovers from 
the old sales pitch when previous US administrations were preparing to sell 
ethnic cleansing as integral to a new stage of the fabled "peace process".

As Middle East Eye noted back in 2015, Washington had been recruited to the 
Greater Gaza Plan in 2007. Then the proposal was that Egypt would give 1,600 sq 
km area in Sinai – five times the size of Gaza – to the Palestinian leadership 
in the West Bank, headed by Mahmoud Abbas.

Palestinians from Gaza would be "encouraged" – that is, pressured through the 
siege and aid blockade, as well as intermittent episodes of carpet bombing 
known as "mowing the lawn"– to flee there.

In return, Abbas would have to forgo a Palestinian state in historic Palestine, 
undermine the right of return of Palestinian refugees enshrined in 
international law, and pass the burden of responsibility for repressing the 
Palestinians on to Egypt and the wider Arab world.

Israel advanced the Sinai plan between 2007 and 2018 in the hope of sabotaging 
Abbas’ campaign at the United Nations seeking recognition of Palestinian 
statehood.

Notably, Israel’s large-scale military assaults on Gaza – in the winter of 
2008, 2012 and again in 2014 – coincided with reported Israeli and US efforts 
to turn the screws on successive Egyptian leaders to concede parts of Sinai.

'Waterfront property'

Trump is already deeply familiar with the Greater Gaza Plan from his first 
presidency. Reports from 2018 suggest he hoped to include it in his "deal of 
the century" plan to bring about normalisation between Israel and the Arab 
world.

In March that year the White House hosted 19 countries in a conference to 
consider new ideas for dealing with Gaza’s mounting, entirely Israeli-made 
crisis.

As well as Israel, the participants included representatives from Egypt, 
Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Bahrain, Oman and the United Arab Emirates. The 
Palestinians boycotted the meeting.

A few months later, in the summer of 2018, Jared Kushner, Trump’s son-in-law 
and architect of his Middle East plan, visited Egypt. A short time later Hamas 
sent a delegation to Cairo to learn about what was being proposed.
Then, as seemingly now, Trump was offering a purpose-built zone in Sinai with 
solar-power grid, desalination plant, seaport and airport, as well as a free 
trade zone with five industrial areas, financed by the oil-rich Gulf states.

Revealingly, a veteran Israeli journalist, Ron Ben-Yishai, reported at the time 
that Israel was threatening to invade and bisect Gaza into separate northern 
and southern sectors to force Hamas’ compliance. That is exactly the strategy 
Israel prioritised last year during its invasion and then set about emptying 
north Gaza of its residents.

Trump also sought to deepen the crisis in Gaza by withholding payments to the 
United Nations agency for Palestinian refugees (Unrwa). That same policy was 
actively pursued by Israel and the Biden administration during the current 
genocide.

Since Trump took office, Israel has banned Unrwa activities anywhere in the 
occupied Palestinian territories.

Trump’s team revived their own interest in the ethnic cleansing plan the moment 
Israel launched its genocide – long before Trump knew whether he would win the 
November 2024 election.

In March last year, nearly a year ago, Kushner used exactly the same language 
Trump does now. He observed that "there’s not much of Gaza left at this point", 
that the priority was to "clean it up", and that it was a "valuable waterfront 
property". He insisted the people of Gaza would have to be "moved out".

Rabbit in the headlights

If Trump refuses to relent, the direction things head next for the people of 
Gaza hangs chiefly on neighbouring Egypt and Jordan: they must either accept 
the ethnic cleansing plan, or Israel will resume the extermination of Gaza’s 
population.
Should they demur, Trump has threatened to cut US aid – effectively decades-old 
bribes to each not to come to the Palestinians’ aid while Israel brutalises 
them.
King Abdulah of Jordan, during a visit to the White House this week, looked 
like a rabbit caught in the headlights.


He dared not anger Trump by rejecting the plan to his face. Instead he 
suggested waiting to see how Egypt - a larger, more powerful Arab state - 
responded.

But privately, as MEE has reported, Abdullah is so fearful of the destabilising 
effects of Jordan colluding in Gaza’s ethnic cleansing – which he regards as an 
"existential issue" for his regime – that he is threatening war on Israel to 
stop it.

Similarly, Egypt has shown its displeasure. In the wake of Abdullah’s 
humiliating visit, Sisi has reportedly postponed his own meeting next week with 
Trump – in a clear rebuff – until the ethnic cleansing plan is off the table.

Cairo is said to be preparing its own proposal for how Gaza can be 
reconstructed. Even Washington’s oil-rich ally Saudi Arabia is in revolt.

It is rare to see Arab states show so much backbone to any US president, let 
alone one as vain and strategically unhinged as Trump.

Which may explain why the US president’s resolve appears to be weakening. On 
Wednesday his press secretary Karoline Leavitt suggested that Trump was now 
seeking from "our Arab partners in the region" a counter-proposal, a "peace 
plan to present to the president".

And in another sign that Trump may be hesitating, Netanyahu walked back his 
threat to resume the genocide unless all the hostages were freed on Saturday. 
He is now demanding only the three that were originally scheduled.

Reports from Gaza are that Israel has also significantly stepped up its aid 
deliveries.

All of which is welcome news. It may buy the people of Gaza a little more time.

But we should not lose sight of the bigger picture. Israel and the US are still 
committed to "cleaning out" Gaza, one way or another, as they have been for the 
past 18 years. They are simply looking for a more propitious moment to resume.
That could be this weekend, or it could be in a month or two. But at least 
Biden and Trump have achieved one thing. They have made sure no one can ever 
again mistake the crushing of Gaza for a peace plan.
Jonathan Cook


-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Groups.io Links: You receive all messages sent to this group.
View/Reply Online (#35237): https://groups.io/g/marxmail/message/35237
Mute This Topic: https://groups.io/mt/111193926/21656
-=-=-
POSTING RULES & NOTES
#1 YOU MUST clip all extraneous text when replying to a message.
#2 This mail-list, like most, is publicly & permanently archived.
#3 Subscribe and post under an alias if #2 is a concern.
#4 Do not exceed five posts a day.
-=-=-
Group Owner: marxmail+ow...@groups.io
Unsubscribe: https://groups.io/g/marxmail/leave/13617172/21656/1316126222/xyzzy 
[arch...@mail-archive.com]
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-


Reply via email to