Anonymous ID: 688226 March 18, 2025, 8:05 p.m. No.22785669   🗄️.is 🔗kun

https://edition.cnn.com/2023/12/07/opinions/israel-hamas-gaza-media-press-prusher/

 

Opinion: I reported on Hamas in Gaza for over a decade. Here are the questions I’m asking myself now

 

Opinion by Ilene Prusher

 

Updated 4:25 PM EST, Thu December 7, 2023

 

Editor’s Note: Ilene Prusher is a journalist and author who spent two decades covering the Middle East. She teaches journalism at Florida Atlantic University, where she is the digital director of MediaLab@FAU. The opinions expressed in this commentary are her own. View more opinion on CNN.

 

CNN

We arrive at Erez Checkpoint. Israeli soldiers thumb through our passports, examine every item in our bags, then wave us through. After a long walk through a barricaded no-man’s land, Palestinian officers register our names and passport numbers, then press us for a list of people we’re planning to meet. Our Palestinian fixer intervenes, reminds the guys with the guns to be nice to us foreigners, and presto: We’re in Gaza. On the list of the three or four people we’re scheduled to see in the course of the day is at least one senior official in Hamas.

 

This is a routine I participated in, on and off, for 16 years of my life while reporting on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict for the American media throughout the 1990s and 2000s, up until my last trip to Gaza in January 2009 at the end of another Israel-Hamas war that shocked the world and caused needless death and destruction. Later, in 2014, I covered a far deadlier 50-day Israel-Hamas war for TIME magazine, this time from southern Israel, Tel Aviv and Jerusalem, mainly because by then I had two toddlers at home and no longer believed entering Gaza was worth the risk.

 

In nearly every trip I made — and there were too many to count — I met with Hamas officials, like seemingly every good journalist did. Like many others, I was curious to hear their viewpoint and, back when peacemaking was a thing and Israel was turning territory over to the Palestinian Authority, ''I was keen to understand why they wouldn’t get on board with the land-for-peace deal known as the Oslo Accords.''

 

The Oslo process for dividing the land with Israel to create a zone of Palestinian autonomy — and possibly statehood — had been embraced, at least tepidly, by the late Yasser Arafat, head of the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO). But Hamas, the PLO’s most significant Palestinian rival, was fundamentally opposed to peace with Israel, insisting the only path forward was “armed resistance” aimed at eradicating Israel. Throughout the 1990s, when the peace process was moving forward, Hamas sought to derail it by blowing up Israeli buses and cafes. By the early 2000s, when peacemaking ground to a halt, they had killed hundreds of Israeli civilians in this manner, leading to further separation of Israeli and Palestinian societies.

 

The Hamas leaders and spokesmen who agreed to our interviews were rarely what you would expect of representatives of a terrorist organization. ''They were men who were fluent in English, logical-sounding about their grievances and highly educated to boot, usually in engineering or medicine.'' They portrayed themselves as part of a “political wing” of Hamas, one that was unaware of what was being planned by the more secretive military wing. Often, these spokesman insisted, they had no idea that an attack was imminent.

 

By and large, we reporters ate it up. Our editors wanted us to have access to this shadowy group and to explain its lure for average Palestinians — and in particular, the strategic challenge it presented to Arafat. By claiming that the organization’s left hand didn’t know what the right hand was doing, Hamas made it easy for themselves to evade tough questions — like, why target civilians rather than military targets? — and convenient for so many of us to feel like we were putting our fingers on the Palestinian pulse rather than sitting down for tea with terrorists.

 

So we sipped their bitter brews, and they talked a good game. “Look, we take no joy in seeing Israeli civilians get blown up,” one spokesman told me — back in the day when Hamas’ worst weapon was a suicide bomber in an urban area — before going on to insist that these attacks were the only rational answer to what they saw as the Israeli occupation of Palestinian lands. When I asked why Hamas wouldn’t take a crack at negotiations instead, they responded that there was no point in talking to Israel — and Israel wasn’t exactly jumping to talk to Hamas either. The spokesman insisted I not use his name with that almost-empathetic quote about not taking joy in killing Israelis. In retrospect, I wonder if he said it because he knew it sounded good to the Western ear.

 

Hamas played other games with language, presenting themselves as reasonable by saying that its leaders would in theory agree to a long-term hudna, or truce, with Israel. Their words sound nice — who wouldn’t chose a lasting truce over the horrific killing and destruction we are now witnessing? — but the reality was that Hamas would never ink a permanent deal with Israel because, their leaders told me, Islam forbade it.

 

And then there were the outright distortions. Ahead of October 7, Hamas duped Israel into thinking that the organization was uninterested in inflaming the situation and wanted Gazans’ lives to improve. With that in mind, Israel actually relaxed the Gaza border crossings in late September — a week before the attack — to let more Palestinian laborers into Israel. Sadly, the opening to thousands of additional workers from Gaza turned Israel into an information sieve from which Hamas reportedly gathered intelligence for its attack in October.

 

People hold placards as they await news of hostages expected to be released by Hamas, amid a hostages-prisoners swap deal between Hamas and Israel, in Tel Aviv, Israel, November 25, 2023.

Opinion: The big question about the Israel-Hamas truce

 

Hamas also played fast and loose with facts they gave us reporters. During the first major Israel-Hamas war in 2008 to 2009, known as Operation Cast Lead, Hamas said that fewer than 50 of the 1,400 dead in Gaza had been combatants. But more than a year later, Hamas’ interior minister acknowledged in an interview with the London-based Al-Hayat newspaper that between 600 and 700 of its militants were killed in that war. In that and in almost every war since, Hamas or other militant groups in Gaza launched rockets that fell unintentionally on their own citizens, but rarely if ever, owned up to the error, instead blaming Israel for the deaths.

 

Yet how often did that stop us from reporting what they told us? That dynamic was on display last month when many mainstream media outlets immediately repeated Hamas’ claim that an Israeli air strike had devastated a hospital and killed a big round figure of 500 Palestinians. More details later emerged, indicating that it was most likely Islamic Jihad, a Hamas rival organization, that had fired an errant missile that landed on the site, and that the casualty count was much lower.

 

Hospitals once again took center stage in the war when Israel surrounded the Al-Shifa Hospital after claiming that Hamas had operated out of it. Hamas has long denied using hospitals despite proof that they do, and did the same this time even though there is evidence that weapons were found on site and tunnels have been built to allow the organization to use Al-Shifa as a base.

 

A Palestinian woman sits on debris in her damaged apartment in the Khezaa district on the outskirts of the southern Gazan city of Khan Younis, as a temporary truce between Israel and Hamas entered its second day on November 25. Mahmud Hams/AFP/Getty Images

Opinion: A perfectly reasonable, highly unrealistic path to peace

 

Reporters can feel they have little choice but to rely on Hamas’ numbers and denials because there are few reporters left in Gaza and few options to verify anything independently. But many journalists could be more transparent about how they don’t have independent verification and provide context on how unreliable Hamas has proved to be in the past.

 

One thing already clear after October 7 is that members of Hamas didn’t sound like they experienced “no joy” in the slaughter of more than 1,200 Israelis and the kidnap of more than 200. Hamas gunmen laughed as they committed the attacks, according to eyewitnesses, and they recorded themselves as they gleefully rampaged through Israeli homes.

 

Did Hamas change? Or was too much of the media too willing to see them as something other than what they always were?

 

It’s probably a bit of both. Although founded in 1987 as an expressly Palestinian organization, there is evidence that Hamas has been influenced by the style and brutality of global jihadist groups in general, and ISIS in particular. Still, Hamas’ focus has remained on “the Zionist entity,” not the US, other Western targets or other religions per se. And to the extent there was once a political wing that might have had different aspirations, October 7 left no doubt that the military wing is now the center of Hamas power and strategy.

 

It’s not as if most of us in the media portrayed Hamas as innocent or moderate. But for years, too many of us treated the group more like an opposition party with occasional violent outbursts than a terrorist organization. In fact, while interning at Reuters at the start of my career in the mid-’90s, I learned that we were never to call Hamas or Islamic Jihad terrorists, only militants. Several outlets maintain that policy even amidst the October 7 massacre, which clearly meets the definition of terror as a deadly attack on civilians for ideological ends.

 

''Journalists working in conflict zones too often pull punches in the interest of appearing neutral, or perhaps to ensure that they stay in the good graces of the gunmen in charge. Many of the questions that now reverberate in my head have no easy answers, but I can say that ''the ultimate goal for too many of us in the media was to ensure continued access to the big story, not to consider whether the people we were dealing with were good actors or reliable sources. Though it’s important for readers and viewers to hear Palestinian voices as well as those of Israelis, treating Hamas like a legitimate government was perhaps the worst of bothsidesism.

 

In 2014, a German journalist was heavily criticized for embedding himself with ISIS for a documentary. Trying to explain such a despicable group of murderers went beyond the pale, ''critics said. Weren’t there some actors whose behavior was so heinous that they didn’t deserve a platform or even so much as a quote, which might only afford them a measure of legitimacy?''

 

''Is this the approach we should have taken with Hamas, or ought to moving forward? In an ideal world, yes, but in this dystopian one we’re watching unfold, that may be too much to expect. In the meantime, ''if journalists continue to interview members of Hamas, we should report their words more critically and not take their comments at face value. We should provide context that notes how unverifiable their information is and how poor their track record for accuracy has been. And we should not shy away from asking ourselves whether our interviews afford them too much legitimacy and give them more of a platform than they deserve.

Anonymous ID: 688226 March 18, 2025, 8:14 p.m. No.22785712   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>22785611

https://youtu.be/TcbuqQd57rY

 

Dr. Jack Kruse…a rabbit hole

 

Dr. Jack Kruse is a neurosurgeon and advocate for decentralized medicine. Often at odds with mainstream medical practices, he challenges established norms and promotes a holistic approach to healthcare.

 

In this captivating talk, Dr. Jack Kruse, a neurosurgeon known for his unconventional views, discusses his experiences and thought-provoking topics on medicine and technology. Sharing anecdotes from his career, Dr. Kruse delves into topics like vaccine safety, autism, and the influence of MK Ultra and CIA experiments on modern technology. He emphasizes the importance of decentralized medicine and medical freedom to protect public health and individual liberties.

 

Transcript Snippet

e CIA want to do they wanted to put it in tobacco and deliver it to Fidel Castro to kill him if they

17:18

couldn't do that they wanted to inject him with something so they had to have a plan to get somebody into the country to

17:25

inject them and that's where Lee Harvey Oswalt came in to the story any of you

17:30

and many of you may not know the story cuz you're so young but Lee Harvey Oswald was given the opportunity in the

17:37

50s to defect to Russia and come back to the United States very easily is kind of

17:42

the craziest story ever but it was a front story so that Fidel Castro would not think that Lee Harvey Oswald was a

17:49

CIA agent so that way he could be the person to deliver the payload when time

17:54

came when it was ready so now we're in in the

17:59

1960s 1962 we have the Bay of Pigs Bay of Pigs is when his uncle

18:07

um did not give any Air Force protection in the Bay of Pigs and one of the

18:13

airline pilots who is a disgraced Eastern Airlines pilot named David Ferry

18:19

got shot down he became really anti anti- Kennedy at the

18:25

same time Dr Ashner actually hired him too so he worked on the

18:31

team with these two other famous cancer researchers just a a disgraced

18:38

pilot because they needed bodies to run an off-site program to continue to

18:43

strengthen this bioweapon then they found a young girl 18 years old who won

18:49

a science award in Florida Bradon Florida names Judith very Baker she uh started to work on viruses

18:57

as cause a can cancer back in the 1960s which is very very unusual and Dr ason

19:03

recruited her promised her if you if he worked or she worked in his lab that she would get Advanced standing in two-lane

19:10

medical school and and become a doctor very quickly so that's the the group of

19:15

characters we have in 1963 the summer of

19:21

1963 the experiments continued and they made a bioweapon uh the day before

19:28

Martin Luther King's I Have a Dream speech Lee Harvey Oswalt Clay Shaw and

19:33

uh David Ferry um went to Clinton Louisiana where Dr Ashner directed uh

19:42

Angola death row inmate to go to a mental hospital in in

19:47

Jackson where David Ferry injected this toxic soup to see if it would

19:54

work okay and this shows you the level of Ethics that we're going on at this time Judith FY Baker had to come back to

20:01

the hospital two weeks later the gentle to confirm that he got cancer which he did he died four weeks later uh the

20:09

reason why this is a big story any of you watched Oliver Stone's JFK movie you'll note that the only person that

20:16

was ever prosecuted for John F Kenny's death was Klay Shaw and the reason why

20:22

he was prosecuted why he was linked to this the prosecuting attorney was Jim Garrison Jim Garr garon 's daughter

Anonymous ID: 688226 March 18, 2025, 8:37 p.m. No.22785813   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5819 >>5856 >>6195 >>6344 >>6348

 

Annual Aid Breakdown for Ukraine

Ukraine’s aid saw a significant increase starting in 2022 due to Russia’s full-scale invasion, with the following approximate annual amounts:

2020: Approximately $1 billion, reflecting pre-invasion economic and democratic development aid, likely minimal military aid.

 

2021: Approximately $1 billion, similar to 2020, with small amounts for security cooperation.

 

2022: Approximately $30 billion, with a major spike following the invasion in February, including $40.1 billion from the Additional Ukraine Supplementary Appropriations Act, 2022 (H.R.7691, enacted March 2022), adjusted for the calendar year.

 

2023: Approximately $60 billion, covering funds from the Continuing Appropriations and Ukraine Supplementary Appropriations Act, 2023 (H.R.8294, $12.5 billion, September 2022) and additional funds from the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2023, totaling around $113.4 billion for FY2022 and FY2023 combined, prorated to $73.3 billion for FY2023, adjusted for calendar year.

 

2024: Approximately $60 billion, including $61.7 billion from the Ukraine Security Assistance and Oversight Supplementary Appropriations Act, 2024 (H.R.5692, enacted April 2024), adjusted for the full year.

 

2025 (up to March): Approximately $10 billion, estimated based on ongoing disbursements, with partial year data suggesting continued significant support.

 

The total for Ukraine from 2020 to March 2025 is approximately $162 billion, close to the reported $174–$175 billion in total appropriations, reflecting the complexity of fiscal year allocations and the dynamic nature of emergency funding.

 

Annual Aid Breakdown for Israel

Israel’s aid is more stable, primarily military, under a 10-year MOU signed in 2016, providing $3.8 billion annually from FY2019 to FY2028. The breakdown, adjusted for calendar years and partial year estimates, is as follows:

 

2020: Approximately $3.8 billion, reflecting full fiscal year FY2020 (October 2019 to September 2020), prorated for January to December 2020 as $3.8 billion, assuming even disbursement.

 

2021: Approximately $3.8 billion, full fiscal year FY2021 (October 2020 to September 2021), aligned with calendar year.

 

2022: Approximately $3.8 billion, full fiscal year FY2022 (October 2021 to September 2022), aligned with calendar year.

 

2023: Approximately $3.8 billion, full fiscal year FY2023 (October 2022 to September 2023), aligned with calendar year.

 

2024: Approximately $3.8 billion, full fiscal year FY2024 (October 2023 to September 2024), aligned with calendar year.

 

2025 (up to March): Approximately $1.9 billion, calculated as six months of FY2025 (October 2024 to March 2025, approximately, adjusted to March 18, 2025, as roughly half the fiscal year), at $3.8 billion annually, prorated as (6/12) * 3.8 = $1.9 billion.

 

The total for Israel from 2020 to March 2025 is approximately $20 billion, reflecting the consistent military aid under the MOU, with minimal economic aid noted in recent years.

 

Running Totals and Comparative Analysis

The running totals, cumulative from 2020 to March 2025, are as follows (see table):

Anonymous ID: 688226 March 18, 2025, 8:39 p.m. No.22785819   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>22785813 (me)

https://x.com/i/grok?conversation=1902199104283013128

 

The prompt:

      • – - - - - - -

 

Israel / Ukraine

 

Hi Grok,

Can you breakdown for me how much money the US has sent to Ukraine & Israel in loans, assistance or grants (military aid included) since 2020

 

Perhaps a bar chart with years on the x axis and money on the y axis? and some running totals?

 

      • – - - - - - -