Scott Horton Show - Just the Interviews - 2/21/22 Ramzy Baroud on the Not-So-Secret Massacres of Palestinian Villages
Episode Date: February 24, 2022Scott interviews Ramzy Baroud about an article he wrote recently on the shifting awareness of Israeli massacres against Palestinian villages. Scott and Baroud discuss what happened during the killings... and what factors may be leading to such a shift in awareness and public opinion. Discussed on the show: “From Tantura to Naqab: Israel’s Long Hidden Truths Are Finally Revealed” (Antiwar.com) Ramzy Baroud is a US-Arab journalist and is the editor-in-chief of the Palestine Chronicle. He is the author of My Father Was A Freedom Fighter: The Untold Story of Gaza and The Last Earth: A Palestinian Story. His new book is These Chains Will Be Broken: Palestinian Stories of Struggle and Defiance in Israeli Prisons. Follow Ramzy on Twitter @RamzyBaroud and read his work at RamzyBaroud.net. This episode of the Scott Horton Show is sponsored by: The War State and Why The Vietnam War?, by Mike Swanson; Tom Woods’ Liberty Classroom; ExpandDesigns.com/Scott; EasyShip; Free Range Feeder; Thc Hemp Spot; Green Mill Supercritical; Bug-A-Salt and Listen and Think Audio. Shop Libertarian Institute merch or donate to the show through Patreon, PayPal or Bitcoin: 1DZBZNJrxUhQhEzgDh7k8JXHXRjYu5tZiG. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
All right, y'all, welcome to the Scott Horton Show.
I'm the director of the Libertarian Institute, editorial director of anti-war.com, author of the book, Fool's Aaron,
Time to End the War in Afghanistan, and The Brand New, Enough Already, Time to End the War on Terrorism.
And I've recorded more than 5,500 interviews since 2004.
almost all on foreign policy and all available for you at scothorton.4 you can sign up the podcast feed there
and the full interview archive is also available at youtube.com slash scott horton's show
all right you guys on the line i have again the great ramsie barrood he is editor of the
palestine chronicle and he wrote my father was a freedom fighter and uh the last earth
and these chains will be broken and he is a regular contributor at anti-war.com.
I am so proud to boast and brag.
Welcome back to the show. Ramsey, how are you, sir?
I'm doing great. Thanks for having me, Scott.
Great to have you here again.
You write so much great stuff.
I can't interview you about it all, but I do want to talk about this extremely important one.
And there was a kind of partner article that went with it too from not too far back.
from tentura to nakab and i'm sure i'm saying both of those wrong sorry from tantura to
nakab israel's long hidden truths are finally revealed so first of all how do you say those
places and what's so important that we're learning now sir uh well um tantura is is a a Palestinian
village that no longer exist but it existed prior to the existence of Israel and
Tantora was one of those villages that, like most Palestinian towns and villages, naturally
resisted the Zionist onslaught in 1947, 1948, which eventually ethnically cleansed the Palestinian
people from their historic homeland of thousands of years. Tantura was one of these
places that was kind of omitted from history books.
you know, like, for example, the Darien Massacre, which was duly reported, perhaps because of the presence of international observers or monitors.
At the time, Palestinians, of course, knew what happened in Tantura, that hundreds of people were lined up and killed by the village's old mosque were killed in their homes, were stuffed into barrels and shot in.
inside the barrels. In fact, one of the terms I used in the article is the blood in the barrels.
One of the Israeli soldiers at the time, who is now admitting to being part of that mass killings, spoke in horror, you know, that his, you know, his guilt carried on for all these years.
And he says, you know, I remember the blood in the barrels. So they killed him in the most savage and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and.
and, you know, creative ways, if you will.
And then they denied that this massacre had existed.
Of course, in our collective memory, as Palestinians, we knew what Tantura was.
Yeah, I was going to say, you guys knew this all along.
This was a big secret from the New York Times or something, but not from you and your family and your people.
Right, and we've discussed this in the past, is the fact how our, not only our collective memory as people,
But our historians, our intellectuals, our human rights activists, none of their opinions matters as long as Israel doesn't admit to anything, it means it never existed.
Right.
So listen, you know, let me stop here for just a second to emphasize to people, because, you know, we all need reminding of this from time to time of just how new the Internet is.
all communication about current events
have always come from
movie tone news
here's what's going on and there's one side of the story
and that's it that you ever hear
and you know even up until our current era
it was rather Jennings and broke off
for the first 10 years of the internet still
with a major competition
now we have this situation
where everybody has an opinion
and a Twitter you know
but back then
you know, if something wasn't covered completely by the mainstream,
if NBC News and the New York Times didn't report it, as you're saying.
It just didn't happen at all.
Absolutely.
And I'll just bring up this one quick anecdote to help illustrate this.
And then I promise I'll be quiet and give you the floor back here.
But my friend Eric Margulies, we've talked about this before.
His mother was one of these characters, this kind of Lois-Lang character,
who went around the Middle East by herself,
interviewing all the
sultans and emirs and potentates
and whatever after World War II
and you know had done all this stuff
and
then she reported
on the poor Palestinian
refugees in the West Bank
but the story was
at the time that this was
a land without people
for a people without land
and so
the NACPA itself the entire thing
was a secret. There
were no 750,000 people run off of their land now living in, you know, hovels on the side of a
dirt path somewhere in the West Bank. There was none of this. And when Eric Margulay's mother,
I'm sorry, I forget her name, but when she reported this, they threatened to kill her and they
threatened to kill baby Eric. I guess the predecessor of the Jewish Defense League in the United
States said, Lady, we'll cut your throat, essentially, for even daring to say that there
such a thing as a Palestinian over there, at all.
So now, I think people maybe are a little bit less surprised to understand how secret this
one particular or these two or three particular massacres were.
Darya Sine, that story got out at some point, but that was supposed to be just that one
or something, maybe.
But so just, you know, anyway, I'm sorry for taking so long to say that, but people got to
understand that it is possible for them to get a...
away with completely covering up something as huge as this when we're talking about the late
1940s here you know it's interesting that you mentioned the internet and and its role in
revealing much of this uh compared to the past because this story of course did not start uh with
this in fact the the the whole reason of why the story has been provoked is the uh or brought back to
the fore is the documentary by called tantura that just
was recently released by Alan Schwartz, I believe it's his name, or Schwartz,
where he basically interviewed the survivors of those who committed the murder.
But this story is not the first time Tantura is in the news.
In 1998, an Israeli student, I think if I remember, the name is Teddy Katz, I think is his name,
1998 Haifa University right that's what it says here I have your article in front of me here
so yeah that's right right and and he came came up with you know he did his research for his
master's degree on Tantura interviewing the survivors of the the Palestinians not not
the murderers not the Israeli troops that killed the Palestinians and and he was he
became the laughing stock of academia in Israel they said he's phony
you know, he was, his research was rejected and he was sued in Israel by the Israeli soldiers at the time.
He was taken to court for defamation of characters and, you know, all sorts of things.
In fact, one thing that I learned only recently, I mean, I knew that Ilan Pappy was involved in revealing some of that stories in Israeli mainstream academia.
But what I didn't know, that the reason he was driven out of Israel is because of how he was attacked, his character was basically destroyed.
He was told that he was a liar.
He didn't know anything about history.
And eventually he ended up believing Israel and going to the University of Exeter.
And I'm revealing this not because, you know, it's a secret information.
He actually wrote it on social media.
And the man feels vindicated 24 years after.
that particular event now the soldiers themselves say this is precisely what happened in the
kind of details and the horror that these details reveal is even beyond what we've had expected
at the time so so this story and it tells us so much number one really like like when when this
debate started in israel didn't the new york times have enough resources and enough you know
people on the ground that they could have actually investigated and interviewed Palestinians,
why it never dawned when U.S. mainstream media to actually take on that story as opposed to
leaving, you know, a young student being completely destroyed and tarnished in Israel and his
career to be ruined, you know, and without anybody intervening. And not just that. How about
the hundreds of other massacres that have been carried out against Palestinians throughout the years?
Isn't it time that we start discussing them openly?
Israel has carried and continues to carry genocide against the Palestinians.
Why don't we have the courage to say it out loud,
even though the Israelis are now themselves saying it?
Why don't we have the courage to have that kind of moral responsibility?
Because, you know, the mass graves of those Palestinians who were killed
are actually now a parking lot.
right in a very popular israeli beach in the south and you know at least dig out the the remains of
their bodies and have them being buried in a in a respectable way you know in it in Palestinian
tradition and culture and religions and look speaking of speaking of the new york times here i mean
this hararets is the new york times of israel here this is not Palestinian media
not that that would be a mark against it,
but just this is against interest here in the broader sense.
The headline at Haaretz reads,
there's a mass Palestinian grave
at a popular Israeli beach.
Veterans confess.
And that's the story in Haaretz.
People can read it right now.
If you get stuck behind the paywall,
just put it in archive.
Just take the original link and put it inarchive.is.
And you can read whatever you want there, folks.
Now, so isn't it important and meaningful, Ramsey, that you have the likes of Benny Morris, who is a hawk, right?
I don't know if he's Lakut, but he essentially says that, man, the real problem is we didn't finish the ethnic cleansing of the Palestinians.
It would have been so much better if we had.
However, here's the story of how we did it, and it's absolutely horrifying and horrible.
Again, against interest.
It doesn't make much sense for his Zionist to do that unless he just has that historic.
ethic that well the truth is the truth in history's history so let's write it down but other than
that you know i'm not i'm not sure what's even worse scott someone who denies something to have
happened in the first place even though they know it has happened and someone else to actually say
it has happened and yes it was completely fine and justified that it has happened and much more
of this should have also have happened i mean it's just from a moral point of view i i i i don't even
know like what is worse to be entirely honest and you know the only comparison i can think of
and that's just honest it's holocaust deniers right you have some people say the holocaust never
happen you have some people say it never happened but it shoulda and we wish it had been bigger
you know it did but they didn't quite finish the job that's exactly what we're talking about here
i can't think of another argument that's a parallel frankly absolutely you know and and it's also one thing
to discuss the morality of history, our take on history.
I know this is a big deal in America at the moment.
You know, how do we deal with history that was terrible, of racism, slavery, and horrible
things that have happened against minorities, people of color, poor whites, you know,
various communities throughout the country for hundreds of years.
How do we understand it according to today's context?
but it's a whole different thing
when that history is repeated
with as gory details
as as
the past
it's happening in Gaza as we speak
and this is why the other place
that we've mentioned in the article
the naqab you know
the or the knakav as they call it
the the
Palestine's desert
in the in the south
where this Bedouin
community has been
really
it's like it's not even the kind of
ethnic cleansing that happens
over the course of a month or a year.
It's a process that has been in the making
for 74 years now.
You know, they have been targeted for 74 years
in 1951 to 1953.
They have been pushed out in large numbers
and according to an Israeli military strategy
led by very well-known Israeli government official
just pushed out of their land.
The land is taken and developed for Jewish purposes only.
These poor Bedouins who lived there
and can only relate to this place as their homes
for, you know, since time immemorial,
being just pushed out entirely.
But that struggle continues until today,
the tiny little minority of Bedouins
who are still living there,
They are still being pushed out.
Their villages being destroyed.
Their water resources being destroyed.
You know, whatever they try to do to reclaim, even when they put schools out, you know,
makeshift schools really more or less, it's confiscated, it's destroyed, it's bulldozed.
There's a particular village called Araqib.
Arakib is, has been serving as the simple of, not only of Israeli colonialism and Zionism.
colonialism, but of Palestinian resistance, it has been destroyed and rebuilt over 150 times.
I can't keep up with the number because it happens every two, three weeks.
They destroy it.
The people go and rebuild it, knowing that this rebuilding is going to only last for a couple of
weeks, and the Israelis will come again and destroy it again and so forth and so on.
And these are not activists.
These are ordinary people, you know, the village there with families, children,
you know, they live every single day.
So it's not like, oh, it's just a principled stance
that Palestinian activists do by rebuilding the village,
just the people who have been living there,
that tribe that has been living there for hundreds of years.
So in other words, tantura is repeated.
It's repeated in Gaza.
Tantura is repeated in the West Bank, in Nakhav,
and it's everywhere.
And now we know, and now we know yet somehow
we still haven't really done anything meaningful to bring this tragedy to an end.
Hang on just one second.
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Right.
Man, I'll tell you what, you know, as we've talked about for years on this show,
I'm just absolutely convinced that American support
for Israel, by and large, I mean popular support for Israel, which is, you know, the numbers do shift
and they are shifting more in the Palestinians favor, I believe. But I think the reason that they are
the way they are is basically based on the simple confusion about the matter. And people think,
look, if they're up against Palestinians, and that means they're from Palestine, right? So that's
the country next door. And it's full of Muslim terrorists. And they're always attacking poor little
Israel trying to extort land from them.
You know, land for peace. Why should we have
to give you land that belongs
to us in exchange for peace, you
crazy terrorist extortionists?
But it's funny because they do always
talk about maybe having a two-state solution
someday and something about
an occupation. Maybe it's, they're talking
about the Palestinians or occupying the poor Israelis.
Boy, if you look at a map of the region,
it kind of looks like somebody took a big
bite out of Israel when
you look at the West Bank there.
And TV will just
never set people straight about who's occupying who and how that big bite out of Israel is actually
all that's left. And even that's deceiving about its left because it's completely conquered
and occupied by the Israelis since 1967, nine years before I was born. Far longer than the Soviets
occupied Eastern Europe. The Palestinians were already beat. They were beat way back in 48. And then
especially in 67. And that's what people just don't understand.
understand. Because then, you know, like you talked about, the crimes of America's past, but this is ongoing up to the current day. So that's the metaphor, right? It was like, if we're talking about the Navajo out in Arizona, this would be like, if we're still constantly the Anglos picking on the Navajo. Instead of building them a skate park and saying, well, sorry about killing almost all of you and whatever. That instead we just build a wall around them. And we starve them and blockade them and constantly drop bombs on their heads.
and fly drones and, you know, treat them as an enemy state to this day kind of a thing,
is the analogy here.
You know, Ben Shapiro on the right-wingers always say, oh, what if the rockets were flying in
from Mexico?
That analogy is not apt.
What if the rockets were flying from over the wall of the giant Navajo concentration camp
we built in Arizona would be the apt analogy?
And then in that case, you understand who's the aggressor and who's the helpless, if not
innocent victim here, right?
That's right, of course.
But there is a silver lining in all of this.
You know, I stumbled by accidentally.
I was doing some research about the American public opinion as far as Palestine and Israel's
concerned for an article that I would be producing soon for anti-war and others.
And it says that actually last year, in May in particular,
a Gallup research, opinion, Paul, says that the support for Palestinians, while still, you know, support for Israel is quite large and present among Americans, but support for Palestinians has reached unprecedented high levels in May.
And it's the first time in history it reaches these numbers.
So something, we are doing something right, obviously.
And we know it's not mainstream media.
corporate media. We are doing something right. I think with the help of social media and
numerous alternative platforms and channels and people speaking honestly about things. They are
naming names and they are speaking the right language. I mean, that's report by Amnesty International.
Really, I mean, I knew that. Talk about that. What report is that?
Right. So Amnesty International came up a couple of weeks ago or so with this incredible report
in which they said Israel is an apartheid state.
Not just in the West Bank and Gaza and is Jerusalem, all of Israel, all of that region,
historic Palestine, not only that, Israel is also an apartheid state as far as the treatment
of Palestinians living in diaspora.
That includes me and my family.
We are also included in that classification.
Now, this is shocking, not that amnesty doesn't do good work, but amnesty has always historically
been quite careful in the kind of language that they have used regarding Palestine and Israel.
And, you know, my personal analysis is that amnesty is a liberal platform. And they have, you know,
support in the mainstream. And therefore, they try not to appear too radical in their description
and their language. But this report is not the most important report. What actually started this
whole thing is Israel's own Bethlehem, Human Rights Group, called Bates.
Salem. They come up with this last year where they said Israel is an apartheid state from the
river to the sea. Human rights watch a few months later come and reaffirm that and declare
Israel to be an apartheid racist regime. And as of late, Amnesty International follows suit.
And we know that there is a very serious conversation at the United Nations, the Human Rights
Council. We are anticipating a similar language where the UN human human human rights.
Rights Council will also dub Israel as an apartheid state. And once that becomes mainstream thinking
and it is rapidly becoming mainstream thinking, I don't know how Israel can actually weasel its way
out of this without absolutely fundamental and real changes on the ground. So finally we are
beginning to see a shift not only within the stances of these groups, but within public opinion
as well in the United States and elsewhere. Right. I mean, and part of it too is because, you know,
Lakoud, if you put yourself in the position of a Zionist concerned very much with Israel's long-term national interest,
Lakut are the absolute worst you could possibly have.
They should have let the West Bank and Gaza Strip go a long time ago back when they promised to in either 79 or at least in the 1990s.
And instead, what's happened is that their right-wing nationalist governments have put them in this position
that from the point of view of most American Jews who are liberals and kind of civil rights MLK sort of tradition liberals from the previous generation,
that they look at it like this is a major threat to the Zionist dream.
How are you supposed to have a Jewish democracy with an 80-20 super duper majority if you integrate all these millions of Palestinians?
And then you have to have this crazy South African apartheid style thing where Alabama's a white state,
even though half the population's black.
You just can't, how are you going to get away with that?
And so you have, that's where I think that there's a big shift that really matters, right,
is among liberal American Zionists, that you're going to ruin everything with this stupid policy.
And by the way, I want to just squeeze this in here, too, is that, you know, you mentioned the phrase river to the sea.
and I know that among American Zionists, Jewish, and Christian, and otherwise, that this phrase has come to mean genocide against Israeli Jews.
See, when they call it, Palestine will be free from the river to the sea.
They mean it won't be Israel anymore.
It'll be Palestine.
And then that just means by definition that all the Jews will be killed and all of this kind of thing.
But I just wanted to point out that Benjamin Netanyahu said the exact same thing, that it is one state.
he said, quote, in order to assure our existence, we need to have military and security
control over all of the territory west of the Jordan, end quote.
So in other words, Lakud says it is one state.
That is itself, whether you use the A word or not, that is official annexation of the West Bank
and the declaration that there will never be an independent Palestinian state.
And therefore, what are you going to do?
Betzelm, HRW, or Amnesty, or anybody else for that matter, as long as words have meaning,
then the game is up. The two-state solution ruse is over, and this is, in fact, an apartheid state.
What else are you going to argue about it, you know?
That's right. I think, in fact, that's, I think, one of the main reasons of why this kind of
new language is being introduced. And by the way, I think the language itself is indicative, that
in order for us to bring justice to the to the Palestinians then we have to talk about one state
because really they even though amnesty it's not really there are human rights groups it's not
their position to offer any any political solutions but but the fact is that they are they are
saying basically there is no difference between a Palestinian living in Gaza under siege and war
the Palestinian living in occupied West Bank Palestinian living in in Jerusalem or a Palestinian living
in Haifa or Yaffa or Aka or a Palestinian living in Jordan, for example, in a refugee camp or in Lebanon, whatever is happening to them, whatever bad things happening to these guys is happening collectively. And therefore, the solution has to be collective. And justice has to be collective. Well, I mean, think about it rationally. Can two state solutions really resolve any of these issues? So it's also important to point that this kind of wholesome approach,
to the problem of apartheid, racism, occupation,
and all of these things is seems to now finally point
to the fact that a solution can only happen.
If all of these issues are addressed at the same time,
and that can only happen with a coexistence,
a system in which everyone coexist as equals in a democratic state.
So that's another encouraging part of the conversation.
right and look I mean all of that can only happen based on the truth based you know you can't just have a bunch of mythologies going in if you're really going to reconcile these things and the fact that you know I guess essentially the Israelis are being forced to recognize and admit to the history of the knockba in a way that you guys have remembered all along could be a real step toward that you've got to presume the good faith of the
the average Israeli that, man, I didn't know we massacred that many people back to something,
you know, kind of thing.
There's got to be a sentiment like that on the Israeli side.
I don't know.
I guess there ain't much of a left there.
Max Blumenthal told me that Israeli political spectrum goes from Dick Cheney to Hitler, you know,
or whatever, to Rabbi Kahane or whoever, you know, all the way to the right.
But that Cheney is the left.
I mean, there is no labor really anywhere.
the left is like the left
half of Lakoud
or whatever, you know what I mean?
Kadima, these guys who are all right-wing
nationalists. The only difference is
some of them are more religious than others
and others are more secular
or others are more Russian-dominated
or, you know, this kind of thing.
But as far as their politics
doesn't seem like there's too many people
to work with on the Israeli side, really.
You know, no partner for peace
over there, Ramsey.
Yeah, exactly.
But here's the thing.
Israel has managed to control this ridiculous system of lies and deception based on several
pillars.
One of these pillars has been controlling the narrative on Palestine and Israel and punishing anybody
who challenges that narrative and calling him all sorts of names, including sadly anti-Semitic
or even if he's Jewish as self-hating Jew.
But that is just no longer possible.
They are losing control of the main mechanism of control that they have had.
for all of these years.
And now they are no longer in a position
that they can keep the genie in the bottle.
I remember when we, you know,
when I started the Palestine Chronicle back in the day,
we were talking about over 20 years ago,
several articles, you know, that we published
during the second intifada,
we were talking about 2000 to 2005,
of Palestinians and pro-Palestinian intellectuals
and activists attacking Amnesty International
for criminal.
creating, for creating, you know, kind of an equal set of responsibilities on Palestinians and Israelis.
They're saying that you have to be holding Israel account.
This language is too fluffy and too, it gives Israel the opportunity to find its way out.
You have to commit to calling Israel what it is.
So, you know, jump 20 years later.
And here we are in a situation where amnesty is finally doing that.
So it means that within these 20 years of struggle, of us trying to control our side of the narrative and the Israelis trying to keep things as status quo as possible, they have lost and we have won.
And when we say Amnesty International, we are talking about hundreds of organizations all across the world.
We're just, we are pointing at the major ones here, right?
So with this defeat, how can Israel, with the Israelis themselves taking responsibilities for their crimes, like in terms.
how can they possibly reverse this? How can they possibly go back in time and try to fix that
control of the narrative once more? So now Israel is being exposed day after day and the world
is seeing Israel exactly for what it is. Well, let's see how far they can play this game.
Let's see how far they can maintain this occupation and sustain this apartheid before the tipping
point happens before the critical mass is achieved. And I really do think, because, you know, as you
know, Scott, we are doing this day and day out for decades now. And we know that, you know, there's
something fundamentally that has changed. So it really is a matter of time. We just keep pushing forward
until Palestine achieved that coveted moment of freedom. Yeah. Well, that day's coming. It's
sooner or later. I sure hope sooner. But, you know, they say the arc of the universe.
bends toward justice.
And again, this will always be my thesis on this.
The truth has a severe anti-Zionist bias here.
If you care, if anybody cares about universal principles
of individual human rights and dignity,
then this cannot stand.
Not for much longer.
That's right.
Best of luck to you, buddy.
That's right.
Thank you very much, Scott.
Aren't you guys?
That is the great Ramsey Baroud.
From Tantura to Nakhab, Israel's long-hidden truths are finally revealed as his latest for anti-war.com.
And of course, check him out at Palestine Chronicle.
And his latest book is These Chains Will Be Broken.
The Scott Horton Show, Anti-War Radio, can be heard on KPFK, 90.7 FM in L.A.
APSRadio.com, anti-war.com, Scotthorton.org, and Libertarian Institute.org.
Thank you.