
Major Andrew Fox is a former British Army officer and completed three tours in Afghanistan. He also served in Bosnia, Northern Ireland, & the Middle East.
https://youtu.be/dN2WGZZG-x0
VIDEO EXCERPTS: . . . That hasn't stopped Egypt joining the genocide case against Israel in the ICJ. And yet they have it in their power to end this genocide immediately by opening the heavily reinforced border gate that you see. So I've been along that border with Egypt, and it is an incredibly well reinforced. So that's something that doesn't quite add up there.
[...] We've got a 50 plus, 60 plus year information campaign supporting the type of thing Hamas is doing in Gaza, and to an extent what the Palestinian Authority are doing in the West Bank, or Judea, and Samaria, or whichever we're calling it today.
This was a reframing backed by a superpower, backed by the Soviet Union during the Cold War, to take the issue of Palestinianism and turn it against Israel and reframe it as oppressor versus oppressed [cultural hegemony], which of course is the narrative that's been heavily pushed throughout Western academia and Western media.
And it is essentially because of that framing of oppressor versus oppressed, it gives the Palestinians a free pass to do whatever they want. And it means that Israel is always the bad guy no matter what happens. And so extraneous issues like what is Egypt doing, what are the Gulf States doing, what is Turkey doing [...] gets kind of overlooked completely.
[...] Look at the fact that Israel has sustained 3,000 casualties, that Israel has the capability to end this tomorrow. If they really wanted to wipe out two million Palestinians, they have enough firepower to do that. And they've demonstrated that repeatedly over the last year, that they have firepower beyond anything the UK could bring, to be quite frank.
And yet they're not using it. There have been more bombs dropped in Gaza than people have been killed. You know, either the IDF are the worst shots in history, or they're actually taking care with civilian lives.
You don't give vaccines for polio to the entire child population of Gaza if you're trying to destroy them. You don't facilitate twice the amount of food aid going into Gaza as was going in before the war, if you're trying to kill everyone. You don't put ground troops into harm's way and have 3,000 families in Israel who are now having to deal with the death and the injury of their loved ones.
You know, why on earth would you do these things if all you wanted to do was to destroy Palestinians or Gazans as an ethnic group? It just doesn't make any sense...
[...] I don't think Israel should have put an embargo on food. You know, it's not something I would support.
However, if we look at the statistics, twice as much food has gone into Gaza during the war as beforehand, over 3,000 calories per person per day, which should be enough to survive on. During the ceasefire period in early January, we saw enough food going into Gaza that should have lasted between 3 and 6 months for every person in Gaza.
We know Hamas is hoarding the aid supplies. We know that they have warehouses full of aid that they have been using to withhold from the population so they can control them and so that they can sell it to pay their fighters.
We know that the UN has bucketloads of aid that has already been cleared for distribution by Israel [...] and yet the UN won't distribute it because they won't work with the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation.
So whilst on the surface it looks appalling, and I agree -- I still state again they shouldn't have put an aid block in, that has now been lifted. There is enough aid in Gaza. The issue is with distribution, and we have to once again insert Hamas into this conversation. There are two sides to this war.
Israel is trying to feed people. Hamas are trying to retain the aid themselves and starve their own population. The UN is refusing to deliver food because they won't work with the IDF and the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation. So, you can paint Israel as the bad guy, but that would be completely devoid of nuance and completely devoid of any balanced assessment of the situation.
Well, I'm glad you brought up the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, because when doing research for this interview, the problem is, Andrew, [...] You see the UN come out and say something. You see the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation come out and say something else. And you've got political commentators of all shapes and hues with their own particular narratives. And you look at this, and you go: I don't know what's true. What is actually happening? Is it the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation? Do they just randomly shoot at people? [...] I guess my question is how do you know the truth and what is going on?
I think what you've perfectly illustrated is the fact that there are two wars going on in Gaza. There's what's actually happening in Gaza and then there is the entire bubble of media and information maneuver that's going on around it. That information campaign is designed to enable Hamas survival. It's designed to force the Israelis through international pressure to a ceasefire. And it's working to an extent.
You know, we saw that letter just this week from 28 countries telling Israel to ceasefire and curiously omitting the fact that it was Hamas who turned down the last ceasefire deal. So there are two [propaganda] wars going on here...
The best Israel conversation you've ever heard ... https://youtu.be/dN2WGZZG-x0
https://www.youtube-nocookie.com/embed/dN2WGZZG-x0
https://youtu.be/dN2WGZZG-x0
VIDEO EXCERPTS: . . . That hasn't stopped Egypt joining the genocide case against Israel in the ICJ. And yet they have it in their power to end this genocide immediately by opening the heavily reinforced border gate that you see. So I've been along that border with Egypt, and it is an incredibly well reinforced. So that's something that doesn't quite add up there.
[...] We've got a 50 plus, 60 plus year information campaign supporting the type of thing Hamas is doing in Gaza, and to an extent what the Palestinian Authority are doing in the West Bank, or Judea, and Samaria, or whichever we're calling it today.
This was a reframing backed by a superpower, backed by the Soviet Union during the Cold War, to take the issue of Palestinianism and turn it against Israel and reframe it as oppressor versus oppressed [cultural hegemony], which of course is the narrative that's been heavily pushed throughout Western academia and Western media.
And it is essentially because of that framing of oppressor versus oppressed, it gives the Palestinians a free pass to do whatever they want. And it means that Israel is always the bad guy no matter what happens. And so extraneous issues like what is Egypt doing, what are the Gulf States doing, what is Turkey doing [...] gets kind of overlooked completely.
[...] Look at the fact that Israel has sustained 3,000 casualties, that Israel has the capability to end this tomorrow. If they really wanted to wipe out two million Palestinians, they have enough firepower to do that. And they've demonstrated that repeatedly over the last year, that they have firepower beyond anything the UK could bring, to be quite frank.
And yet they're not using it. There have been more bombs dropped in Gaza than people have been killed. You know, either the IDF are the worst shots in history, or they're actually taking care with civilian lives.
You don't give vaccines for polio to the entire child population of Gaza if you're trying to destroy them. You don't facilitate twice the amount of food aid going into Gaza as was going in before the war, if you're trying to kill everyone. You don't put ground troops into harm's way and have 3,000 families in Israel who are now having to deal with the death and the injury of their loved ones.
You know, why on earth would you do these things if all you wanted to do was to destroy Palestinians or Gazans as an ethnic group? It just doesn't make any sense...
[...] I don't think Israel should have put an embargo on food. You know, it's not something I would support.
However, if we look at the statistics, twice as much food has gone into Gaza during the war as beforehand, over 3,000 calories per person per day, which should be enough to survive on. During the ceasefire period in early January, we saw enough food going into Gaza that should have lasted between 3 and 6 months for every person in Gaza.
We know Hamas is hoarding the aid supplies. We know that they have warehouses full of aid that they have been using to withhold from the population so they can control them and so that they can sell it to pay their fighters.
We know that the UN has bucketloads of aid that has already been cleared for distribution by Israel [...] and yet the UN won't distribute it because they won't work with the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation.
So whilst on the surface it looks appalling, and I agree -- I still state again they shouldn't have put an aid block in, that has now been lifted. There is enough aid in Gaza. The issue is with distribution, and we have to once again insert Hamas into this conversation. There are two sides to this war.
Israel is trying to feed people. Hamas are trying to retain the aid themselves and starve their own population. The UN is refusing to deliver food because they won't work with the IDF and the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation. So, you can paint Israel as the bad guy, but that would be completely devoid of nuance and completely devoid of any balanced assessment of the situation.
Well, I'm glad you brought up the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, because when doing research for this interview, the problem is, Andrew, [...] You see the UN come out and say something. You see the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation come out and say something else. And you've got political commentators of all shapes and hues with their own particular narratives. And you look at this, and you go: I don't know what's true. What is actually happening? Is it the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation? Do they just randomly shoot at people? [...] I guess my question is how do you know the truth and what is going on?
I think what you've perfectly illustrated is the fact that there are two wars going on in Gaza. There's what's actually happening in Gaza and then there is the entire bubble of media and information maneuver that's going on around it. That information campaign is designed to enable Hamas survival. It's designed to force the Israelis through international pressure to a ceasefire. And it's working to an extent.
You know, we saw that letter just this week from 28 countries telling Israel to ceasefire and curiously omitting the fact that it was Hamas who turned down the last ceasefire deal. So there are two [propaganda] wars going on here...
The best Israel conversation you've ever heard ... https://youtu.be/dN2WGZZG-x0