Forget the fog of war. Even in war, and sometimes especially in war, some things are exceedingly clear. Regarding the so-called 'Hamas-Israel War', for instance, it is obvious that in reality it is not a war at all but a genocide, namely the Gaza Genocide, carried out by Israel against the Palestinians whose unbroken resistance will be the stuff of legends, and of history too.
Likewise, in the case of Israel's current assault on Iran - really, of course, a combined US-Israeli attack from the get-go - there is no room for doubt that it is criminal and a "blatant act of aggression," as multiple experts in international law agree. That's because in essence, Israel is not acting with a UN mandate - which it would not have received - or in self-defense.
The legal basis for this compelling assessment is not complex and there is no room for good-faith debate: Israel's attack violates Article 2 (4) of the foundational UN Charter, which is recognized universally as jus cogens, that is, a binding norm: no pick and choose.
The few generally accepted, narrowly defined potential exceptions to this article's comprehensive prohibition on the use of force, such as an erroneous incursion, certain operations at sea, or a rescue of nationals, clearly do not apply. The Israeli onslaught also does not have the blessing of the UN Security Council, and it cannot possibly count as lawful self-defense under Article 51.
So far, so simple. If anyone tries to make this look complicated by flagrantly misapplying and abusing the notion of a 'preemptive strike', you are dealing with Israeli or Israel-Lobby disinformation and propaganda. That too is anything but surprising.
Yet what is more puzzling than the above is the response of the governments, and often the mainstream media of the West, to this clearly criminal Israeli attack. After years of invoking international law to go after Russia, it turns out that the same leaders and talking heads will tie themselves into 5-D pretzels to let Israel get away with whatever Israel feels like doing on any given day.
This is not really news either, of course: Western 'elites', with Washington always in the lead, have behaved no better when serving as accomplices in Israel's Gaza Genocide. But there is something peculiar and noteworthy about how exactly some important Western politicians and their media and 'think tank' experts spin the attack on Iran.
Take, for instance, Germany. Its chancellor Friedrich Merz has gone out of his way to loudly endorse the assault on Iran. He has even exposed himself to ridicule and some - if far too little - criticism by employing revoltingly indecent language. Calling Israel's actions "dirty work" (it sounds even worse in the original German: "Drecksarbeit") that must be done and for which we all should be grateful, Merz has revealed his double racism: As a German and a historian, I can only say that a German leader praising Jews for doing "our" dirty work is, to put it very mildly, extremely boorish. Defining the criminal killing of Iranians as that "dirty work" adds a very nasty "colonial" flavor reminiscent of say, Kaiser Wilhelm II gloating over massacring Chinese during the so-called Boxer Rebellion.
While Merz has been clumsy enough to couch his obnoxious ideas in equally obnoxious language, he has by no means been alone. All too many prestigious German publications, such as the staid Frankfurter Zeitung or the also important Merkur newspaper, have hurried to either simply agree with Merz or at least to excuse and relativize his vile statement. In addition, rather overworked all-purpose 'experts', such as the reliably conformist and rarara-russophobic Christian Mölling, have used their perma-perk in Germany's streamlined talk shows to cynically diminish international law and help dress up Israel's newest crime as so necessary that it trumps all law anyhow.
Mölling was self-unaware enough to openly argue that some countries (read: Israel) can't afford the "luxury" of accepting "normative limits" and that international law, anyhow, might be "protecting the wrong ones" (read: Iran). It's breathtakingly brazen and intellectually primitive, and also historically speaking, very German in the worst sense:
If we or our friends (read: Israel) feel constrained by international law, then that's a problem not for us or our friends but for international law.And now, let's take a step back and think for a moment like a German who was not a conformist intellectual mediocrity: Enlightenment giant Immanuel Kant. For those with ears to hear and brains to process, Kant has taught us that reason and ethics demand that the justifications for our actions ought to be generalizable in good conscience. In short, when we act, we should be able to show that we are acting according to a fair and reasonable rule.
Let's generalize into such a rule, then, what German leader Friedrich Merz has just said and what all too many German mainstream representatives agree with:
A country (here: Israel) that feels sufficiently afraid (as judged by that country) of another country (here: Iran) has a right (that trumps international law) to attack that other country without provocation and even during ongoing negotiations.Interesting. Consider that German elites have been fanning war hysteria relentlessly. Not a day seems to go by without some German general, spy, or politician warning their fellow Germans that Russia is at least likely, really almost certain, to attack within the next five years or so. Evidence: zero.
Indeed? So, if we are all supposed to be so afraid of Russia in Germany, does that now mean that according to Merzian logic we may as well one day launch a preemptive strike on Moscow? After all, we could then say we felt threatened and our military and the intelligence services were telling us that the Russians were coming. And moreover, we'd probably claim that we, the Germans, were proudly doing the 'Drecksarbeit' for all of NATO (minus, most likely, the US). And isn't doing the 'Drecksarbeit' now officially a good thing in Germany, again?
Absurd, you say? Yes, absolutely. Exactly as absurd as Israel's pretexts for attacking Iran. And yet those have been officially endorsed by a German chancellor, including self-revealing dirty language. Let's hope that Moscow does not take seriously what Merz says. Because if Moscow did take it seriously, then by Merzian logic, it should feel very threatened indeed by Berlin - and again by Merzian logic, who knows where that might lead.




Reader Comments
Mertz is a fool - for many reasons, but in this crazed threatening against Russia, he is worse - a rabid, frothing-at-the-mouth lunatic, who just may lead Germany into another huge defeat.
I'm impressed - by the hypocrisy and impertinence ...
Iran began breaching limits imposed by the nuclear deal in 2019. Since then, it has expanded its uranium enrichment program. Iran’s advances included enriching uranium to 60 percent, a level close to weapons-grade that has no practical civilian application, and deploying advanced centrifuges that enrich uranium more efficiently. Iran has gained knowledge from these activities that cannot be fully reversed.As of November 2024, Iran’s stockpile of enriched uranium included:
182 kilograms of uranium enriched to 60 percent.
Iran was prohibited from enriching uranium at Fordow for 15 years under the JCPOA.
November 2024, Kamal Kharrazi, an advisor to the Supreme Leader, said that Iran will “modify its nuclear doctrine” if “an existential threat arises." This isn't allowed by the treaty which makes Iran in direct violation of a few governing laws for nuclear use.
What of the crimes in Palestine and the crime of killing the Iranian negotiation team?
You are a prick of the first order.
Peter Jennings A coalition of Iran-backed militias and political parties that includes Hamas, Hezbollah and the Houthis
According to the Palestinian Red Crescent, one of the Houthis attacks hit the Israeli-occupied West Bank and killed five Palestinians, including three children.
The reduced power of Iran in the region is evident in statements from the militias in the axis of resistance. In a statement, Hizbollah condemns Israel's attack on Iran. However, threats of military retaliation are omitted.
Irans negotiating team is made up of:
Majid Takht-e-Ravanchi – Deputy Foreign Minister for Political Affairs
Kazem Gharibabadi – Deputy Foreign Minister for Legal and International Affairs
Esmaeil Baghaei.
And last I checked they were all still breathing.
Iran reduced IAEA monitoring activities in 2021, making it more challenging for the agency to provide assurance that Iran’s nuclear program is peaceful and to account for all nuclear materials within Iran. Iran began breaching limits imposed by the nuclear deal in 2019.
Iran was prohibited from enriching uranium at Fordow for 15 years under the JCPOA.
Iran broke the rules and were thus punished. The US was just servingvuu
Instances of violating international law: The Iraq War: The US invasion of Iraq in 2003 was widely criticized as a violation of international law, particularly the UN Charter, which prohibits the use of force against another state except in self-defense or with UN Security Council authorization. Targeted killings (drone strikes): The use of drone strikes in countries like Pakistan, Yemen, and Somalia, without due process or clear legal justification, has been criticized as a violation of international humanitarian law and human rights law. Torture and rendition: The Bush administration's use of torture techniques like waterboarding and the CIA's program of extraordinary rendition (transferring detainees to countries where they were likely to be tortured) were widely condemned as violations of international law and the Geneva Conventions. There were plenty more but that should do for now.
In view of Iraq's material breaches, the basis for the ceasefire has been removed and use of force is authorized under resolution 678. Iraq's actions violated the requirement contained in Article 2 of the UN Charter that States resolve their disputes by pacific means and Article 2's prohibition on the use of force against the territorial integrity and political independence of another State. As a result, within a few hours of the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait the Security Council declared the Iraqi action a breach of the peace in Resolution 660. Four days later the Security Council explicitly recognized the right of Kuwait and its coalition partners to use force in collective self-defense in Resolution 661.
Open Briefing identified 29 different models of armed drone in use with China, India, Iran, Israel, Russia and Turkey.
82% – torture or other ill-treatment was reported in four-fifths of the countries covered by Amnesty International.
So how is it violating of international law and the Geneva Conventions when most of the countries still do it? You aren't going after them. You know who is one of the biggest violators of international law and the Geneva Conventions is? IRAN.
You have proven nothing except your hypocrisy.
Germany should be attacking isreal right now and stopping this genocide of the only semitic people in Palestine and the stolen lands. There lays the reasons for all German woe over the past 80 years.
The reason for it all.
Now consider what his puppet masters "lost" lately. The Lithium deposits in the Donbas which Zelensky promised to Starmer and then Trump were just one of the the latest "investments". Not that they ever really owned it, which doesn't mean they didn't hypothecate it already several times over.
What would you do after ineptly painting yourself in a corner like that stupid hacks ...
Sorry, couldn't resist : [Link]
Although I wouldn't describe it as Tarantino-esque. IMHO the hallmarks of Tarantino are senseless violence and flippant jokes. Not a fan of him.