Möglich: Ja. Erlaubt: Sachbeschädigung. Geboten: … mhh….

Photo: R.H.
Warum der Vorwurf der Täter-Opfer-Umkehr im Gazakrieg irreführend ist.
Peter Lintl in Internationale Politik

[Drei Artikel können kostenfrei gelsen werden]
Join the European Community of Friends of Standing Together for an Online Talk & Solidarity Event with activists from the Tel Aviv University Chapter of Standing Together
📅 Wednesday, 13 August 2025
🕕 6:00 – 7:30 PM (CEST)
👉register to join the zoom
(Language: English, with automatic subtitles in German & French)
Across Gaza, Israel’s war of annihilation continues to claim thousands of innocent lives, and the hostages remain in captivity. In the midst of this relentless violence and grief, a joint Israeli-Palestinian movement is standing firm, refusing to surrender to despair.
As active supporters from afar – many with deep personal ties to the land and its people – the European Friends of Standing Together wish to honour the movement’s role as the foremost voice confronting a corrupt government determined to drag the country into a pointless and endless war, because seeing them take to the streets gives us hope as well. Together we say: This war must end. There is another way.
On 13 August, the European Friends of Standing Together – from Belgium, Berlin, France, Sweden, and beyond – invite you to an urgent online conversation with activists from the Tel Aviv University Chapter of Standing Together. Register here.
You will hear firsthand:
There will also be space for your questions and reflections.
💜 Your participation matters. This is more than a talk – it is also a chance to act. Every donation to the “Fighting for Life” campaign made before 17 August will be doubled by supporters in Israel-Palestine and abroad. Your contribution will directly strengthen this growing movement.
Donate now – help Standing Together protect lives and build a future beyond war: https://omdi.me/tel-aviv-u-fights
Let’s stand together – across borders – for life, dignity, and justice.
In Solidarity,
European Friends of Standing Together
Äußerungen von Muriel Asseburg und Peter Lintl
Die Meldungen aus dem Nahen Osten überschlagen sich. Die SWP Expert:innen Drin. Muriel Asseburg und Dr. Peter Lintl ordnen die Lage in zahlreichen Medienbeiträgen ein:
🔹 Muriel Asseburg spricht sich im Deutschlandfunk Kultur dafür aus, die Anerkennung Palästinas nicht als blauäugig zu betrachten, sondern als Teil eines Maßnahmenpakets inklusive Reform der Autonomiebehörde und internationaler Sicherheitspräsenz & damit ein Schritt in Richtung Konfliktregelung.
🎧 https://lnkd.in/eDVPA4JC
🔹 Peter Lintl fordert im MDR aktuell-Interview einen Geiseldeal und mehr europäischen Druck auf Israels Regierung. Eine Ausweitung des Krieges gefährde die noch lebenden Geiseln und verschärfe die ohnehin katastrophale humanitäre Lage.
🎧 https://lnkd.in/esSx3F2p
🔹 Im rbb Inforadio analysiert Peter Lintl die fehlende Nachkriegsstrategie Israels und warnt vor der maßgeblich innenpolitisch motivierten Kriegsführung Netanjahus.
🎧 https://lnkd.in/eDdczhUS
🔹 In der Frankfurter Rundschau kritisiert Muriel Asseburg das Zögern Deutschlands und der EU. Menschenrechtsverletzungen haben bislang kaum Konsequenzen gehabt, konkrete Schritte europäischer Politik wie etwa eine Aussetzung von Teilen des Assoziierungsabkommens seien überfällig.
📰 https://lnkd.in/e8Qmt2sx
🔹 Im Interview mit Haaretz erklärt Muriel Asseburg, wie die deutsche Israel-Politik zwischen Kritik und Unterstützung schwankt und warum die Anerkennung Palästinas ein starkes Signal wäre.
📰 https://lnkd.in/ew2P7uZ5
🔹 Im Gespräch mit der DW erläutert Muriel Asseburg, warum Deutschland mit der Anerkennung Palästinas zögert und weshalb dieser Schritt dennoch überfällig ist.
🎧 https://lnkd.in/eEAA7rhb
Thema: Israels Premier Netanjahu will den Gazastreifen vollständig besetzen. Das Militär ist dagegen.

As a binational movement of Palestinians and Israelis committed to nonviolence and equality, Combatants for Peace issues this urgent statement in light of the deepening humanitarian and political crisis across Gaza and the West Bank:
In response to the continued policy of starvation in Gaza and the accelerating ethnic cleansing of Palestinian communities in the West Bank, we are compelled to speak clearly: this is genocide – and it must be stopped.
We do not use this word lightly. As outlined in B’Tselem’s recent report, “Our Genocide” what we are witnessing is not simply a failure to protect civilian life – it is the deliberate, state-enabled destruction of it.
In Gaza, more than 60,000 people have been killed, including thousands of children. Families are dying of hunger, and entire neighborhoods have been reduced to rubble. Israel has systematically and deliberately destroyed over 70% of Gaza’s buildings, damaged or destroyed 94% of hospitals, and wiped out 89% of schools. Aid is obstructed, water is cut off, and civilians are being shot as they attempt to reach food. This is not a natural disaster – it is a deliberate policy choice aimed at destroying the conditions for civilian life.
In the West Bank restrictions on movement have worsened dramatically, with checkpoints multiplying, roads closed without notice, and entire villages cut off from hospitals, schools and markets – all while entire rural Palestinian communities are being displaced by armed settlers and military units working in tandem. In the Jordan Valley, South Hebron Hills, and northern districts, homes have been torched, water sources poisoned, livestock killed, and people forced to flee. Just last night, Awdah Hathaleen – a well-known and loved community activist from Umm al-Khair – was shot and killed in yet another murderous settler attack. Weeks earlier, Sayfollah Musallet was beaten to death in the village of Sinjil while defending his family’s land from encroaching settlers. These are not isolated acts. They are part of a clear and documented strategy to remove Palestinians from their land – what international law recognizes as ethnic cleansing.
We also recognize the pain and anguish of Israeli families whose loved ones remain held hostage in Gaza. These hostages must be returned unharmed now – or, where necessary, given a respectful burial. Their immense suffering cannot be ignored. But it also cannot justify the starvation and mass killing of an entire civilian population.
At the same time, thousands of Palestinian political prisoners remain imprisoned in Israeli jails, held in inhumane and degrading conditions. Many have endured years without trial, in solitary confinement, or denied access to legal recourse. Their release must be part of any just and lasting political resolution.
Any meaningful path toward peace must confront the full scope of human rights violations in this conflict – including the systemic use of unlawful detention and collective punishment against Palestinians, and the ongoing trauma, insecurity, and targeting of civilians experienced by Israelis. Justice must be extended to all who live here, without exception.
As Palestinians and Israelis who have chosen to walk the path of nonviolence – even in a time of war – we call on all people of conscience, within our societies and beyond them, to speak out. To act. To refuse complicity, and to reject the lies that tell us there is no other way.
We remain committed to peace, to nonviolence, and to each other.
This commitment is rooted in the belief that the occupation must end, and that justice is not a dream – it is a requirement. Only then can we begin to repair what has been broken – and begin to build the future we know is possible: a future where Palestinians and Israelis live in freedom and equality, guided by a shared commitment to nonviolence and humanity.
In solidarity and hope,
Combatants for Peace
Auch andere als ethnisch.nationale Interpretationen sind möglich …

Ein Beitrag von Yonat Shimron auf RNS

| By Tom Fletcher, Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator |
As the world is witnessing, the humanitarian crisis in Gaza is devastating. One in three people in Gaza hasn’t eaten for days. People are being shot just trying to get food to feed their families. Children are wasting away. This is what we face on the ground right now.
We welcome Israel’s decision to support a one-week scale-up of aid, including lifting customs barriers on food, medicine and fuel from Egypt and the reported designation of secure routes for UN humanitarian convoys. Some movement restrictions appear to have been eased today, with initial reports indicating that over 100 truckloads were collected.
This is progress, but vast amounts of aid are needed to stave off famine and a catastrophic health crisis. Across the UN agencies and humanitarian community, we are mobilized to save as many lives as we can.
But we need sustained action, and fast, including quicker clearances for convoys going to the crossing and dispatching into Gaza; multiple trips per day to the crossings so we and our partners can pick up the cargo; safe routes that avoid crowded areas; and no more attacks on people gathering for food.
Fuel must be allowed in consistently and at the volume needed to keep aid operations running.
More than 59,000 people have reportedly been killed in Gaza since 7 October 2023, nearly 18,000 of them children.
International humanitarian law must be respected. Aid must not be blocked, delayed or come under fire. Hostages must be released, immediately and unconditionally.
Ultimately of course we don’t just need a pause – we need a permanent ceasefire.
The world is calling for this lifesaving aid to get through. We won’t stop working for that.
Ein Interview auf Kontrast.at mit der in Berlin lebenden, in West-Jerusalem aufgewachsenen Aktivistin Vered Berman.

Während sich die Stimmen mehren, die Augen nicht länger vor dem Leid und dem Hunger der Palästinenser:innen im Gazastreifen zu verschließen (Etwa Crisis Group, Abraham Initiatives, Forward Ärzte ohne Grenzen etc.) …
Hier ein Blick auf das, was die Besatzung und die Militäreinsätze mit den Besatzern macht (… wem klingen hier nicht die Worte von Y. Leibowitz nach??)
