Zionists Begin to Worry About Consequences of Gaza Genocide
DEIR AL-BALAH, Gaza Strip (Dispatches) — Israel pressed ahead Tuesday with its new military onslaught on Gaza despite mounting international criticism, launching airstrikes that health officials said killed at least 85 Palestinians.
The Zionist regime launched its new military invasion of Gaza over the weekend, saying it aims to return dozens of captives held by Hamas and destroy the resistance group.
More than 600 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli strikes in the past four days, according to Dr. Marwan Al-Hams, director of Gaza’s field hospitals.
A leader of center-left politics in the occupied territories said Tuesday that Israel was becoming an “outcast” because of the entity’s approach to the war.
“A sane entity doesn’t engage in fighting against civilians, doesn’t kill babies as a hobby and doesn’t set for itself the goals of expelling a population,” Yair Golan, a retired general and leader of the opposition Democrats party, told Reshet Bet radio.
His comments were rare criticism from inside Occupied Palestine of its wartime conduct in Gaza. Many settlers have criticized Netanyahu throughout the war, but that has been mostly limited to what opponents argue are his political motives to continue the war. Criticism over the war’s toll on Palestinian civilians has been almost unheard.
Comparing Israel’s actions to those of South Africa’s during the decades of apartheid, the longtime critic of Netanyahu, the Zionists “are the ones now taking actions that are utterly unconscionable”.
Netanyahu swiftly slammed Golan’s remarks, calling them “wild incitement” against Israeli soldiers and accusing him of echoing “disgraceful antisemitic blood libels”.
Former Israeli prime minister Ehud Barak called Golan “a brave, direct man,” adding that his