Behind the Enemy Everywhere: Return of Palestinian External Ops?


In 1971, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) published an issue of its journal Al-Hadaf, dedicating its second edition to the topic ‘The PFLP and External Operations.’ The piece explored the Front’s rationale and its responses to the varied reactions surrounding the operations it had launched since July 1968. Operations that included hijackings and bombing Israeli companies and embassies across Europe.

The Front’s response focused on its fundamental principles, chiefly, the nature and definition of the enemy. According to the PFLP, the enemy camp is a triad: The Israeli Entity (Zionist movement), global imperialism, and Arab reactionaries. This, the Front argued, was a precise diagnosis of the conflict. Consequently, it maintained that targeting the enemy should not be restricted by geography, since the enemy itself had made the entire world a battlefield.

The second pillar of the PFLP’s reasoning concerned media and mobilization: external operations, far from tarnishing the Palestinian cause, were in fact a form of revolutionary media that forced the world to listen to the Palestinians. “These operations,” the pamphlet stated, “are revolutionary propaganda that pulls out the wax from European ears.” During that period, the media dimension was central to the fedayeen who carried out such missions. In the collective will and testament of the martyrs of the 1972 Munich operation, the fighters wrote: “We hope our revolutionary action will help the world grasp the grotesque reality of the Zionist occupation in our land. Our revolutionary method aims to expose Zionist-imperialist ties.”

The martyrs, and the Front, were right. These operations functioned as screams against a near-total Zionist grip over global media. For Palestinians and Arabs living under suffocating silence, these missions were screams embodied in flesh and blood. As martyr Nizar Banat once put it: “In the 1970s, Palestinians struck hard, and the world sympathized. It sympathized when we struck back.”

The martyrs, and the Front, were right. These operations functioned as screams against a near-total Zionist grip over global media


Today’s reality is not far from the logic the PFLP once laid out. In fact, the enemy camp, with its Zionist, imperialist, and reactionary Arab lackeys, has never been more bloodthirsty. The media logic also remains sound: armed resistance is still the most potent form of revolutionary media. What has changed, however, is that new communications tools have enabled armed struggle within occupied Palestine to become the primary focus. For those who believe that today’s narrative shift in our favor is due to a global moral awakening in the face of genocide: imagine for a moment if the resistance in Gaza were to surrender, if the Israeli army marched in and handed the Strip over to the Palestinian Authority. How would the narrative look then, especially if written by collaborators with the occupation?

The rise of the “red triangle” marks a historic shift: for the first time, we are witnessing widespread admiration and respect for armed resistance, perhaps even more than the Viet Cong or Algeria’s FLN once received. Even amid vast ideological differences among Palestine supporters (and among Palestinians and Arabs themselves) “they are all red triangles,” as one friend put it. What the resistance’s ambushes protect is the Zionists’ worst nightmare: our unique and unbroken fusion of heroism and victimhood—a paradox that we express without contradiction. In this same vein, the operations in Yemen echo the historical model of “external operations.” If a bomb planted in the late 1960s at the ZIM Shipping Company’s office in London symbolized external targeting, then Yemen’s strikes today hit the company’s nerve center.

But our central and most pressing issue remains this: shifts in narratives, no matter how strategically important, do not stop a genocide. While Yemen has successfully confronted the US and harmed their interests, it has not yet succeeded in forcing the enemy to cease its extermination campaign. Returning to the PFLP’s handbook, its strategic guidance is worth recalling: “We must adopt the principle of adapting to the objective conditions of the battle, to the nature of the enemy and its tools.”

Hence, despite the anguish and rage, imagine that decades from now we ask ourselves: how did the Zionist bastards massacre us so thoroughly? How were we not “behind the enemy everywhere”?

Still, this question demands strategic analysis. One of the lessons from PFLP’s literature is the importance of debating strategy, something the resistance movements have often lacked in an era poisoned by fanfare and blind glorification, with devastating consequences. Ironically, the same booklet warned of the enemy’s ability to “sway those high on sectarianism, regionalism, or personal gain” (noting that “sectarianism” then referred more to factionalism than today’s usage).

This is a thorny issue. One could argue, with good reason, that such operations today might backfire, reviving Zionist propaganda that frames its war as an extension of the global “War on Terror.” This could also deepen western involvement in the efforts to exterminate us. Additionally, the fantasy that western powers will intervene to stop the genocide out of concern for their own internal stability is a weak and unlikely scenario. One thing is non-negotiable, however: targeting soldiers and settlers on Arab land and in normalizing Arab states is not only legitimate, it’s long overdue.

In this bleak chapter of our struggle, we have three immediate goals: stop the war, end the occupation of Gaza, and lift the siege. Achieving them means breaking the Israeli right wing and Netanyahu himself. But domestically, there’s no viable Zionist “division” to exploit; Netanyahu still commands a solid majority. His assassination, in this stage, would be both decisive and beneficial. Yet the real pressure point lies outside, within the US administration and, specifically, in the figure of Donald Trump. The key question, then, is how to force the Americans to put a leash on their rabid dog.

Hence, despite the anguish and rage, imagine that decades from now we ask ourselves: how did the Zionist bastards massacre us so thoroughly? How were we not “behind the enemy everywhere”?


Two years into this war, we don’t have many tools left, and due to miscalculations, we’ve mishandled the ones we did possess. What remains is the global pressure born of Zionist genocidal violence: its impact on media narratives and public opinion. But even this tool is limited. While genocide may have spurred global revulsion towards Zionism, it has paradoxically instilled fear, leading to cowardly retreats and survivalist instincts. The impact of this tool, though measurable in small shifts in public opinion, is unreliable and too slow. Time is made of blood and children’s limbs, and the Americans and Zionists have already accepted the cost of bad PR. They’ve doubled down.

Our next tool is Yemen, which continues to perform admirably. One of its most revolutionary traits is the relentless search for any way to exert pressure. The rage and urgency that shape its decision-making are signs of real revolutionary will. It is admittedly true that the blood of its leaders boils at every image coming out of Gaza.

The last tool is Gaza’s own endurance, and the legendary ability of its fighters to hurt the enemy. Zionism faces a strategic dilemma here: it has failed to fracture Gaza’s internal cohesion or create rifts between its people and the resistance. Even those who oppose Hamas know they share the same fate. Both sides know that their only salvation lies in the release of the captives. And as for us, who among us has the heart to look Gazans in the eye and say: hold on a little longer?

Within this strategic diagnosis, it is our duty to support these three tools: global pressure, the fortified front in Yemen, and Gaza’s unbreakable resilience. Support can come in words, funds, and perseverance, similar to that of Yemen’s. If the long-term answer to what is to be done? lies in reactivating the tools of the Second Intifada, then the urgent question of the moment is: Will Netanyahu’s madness trigger the reawakening of the tools that preceded it? Even if it takes the form of senseless violence in the face of total deadlock?

source: Al Akhbar

abolitionmedia.noblogs.org/?p=…

#alAqsaFlood #gaza #palestine #pflp #resistance #westBank

The Xenon Death Flash: How a Camera Nearly Killed the Raspberry Pi 2

Link: magnus919.com/2025/05/the-xeno…
Discussion: news.ycombinator.com/item?id=4…

“This situation clearly reflects the occupation’s policy of ‘engineered starvation’ by which it deliberately controls the flow & distribution of food, further deepening the humanitarian catastrophe” #GazaGenocideaje.io/31fovy?update=3729761
in reply to Aral Balkan

Eco on fascism's roots: 9. For Ur-Fascism there is no struggle for life but, rather, life is lived for struggle.
Thus pacifism is trafficking with the enemy. It is bad because life is permanent warfare. This, however, brings about an Armageddon complex. Since enemies have to be defeated, there must be a final battle, after which the movement will have control of the world.
This entry was edited (2 months ago)

Junger #Syrer vor Gericht: "Ungläubige kann man köpfen, das ist normal!"


"Das steht auch so im #Koran", erklärt der unterdrückte #Schutzsuchende.
#Richter zeigt Milde und sieht den Terror-Gläubigen "auf einem guten Weg", weil sein #Familiennachzug ansteht.

krone.at/3792417

In einer funktionierenden Gesellschaft passen sich die Gäste dem Gastgeber an.
In Deutschland passt sich die Gesellschaft den Gästen an und verzichtet auf seine Kultur.
#Islamismus #Gruppenvergewaltigungen #Messermorde #Brandmauertote #Islam #Brandmaueropfer #Massenvergewaltigungen
#Islam #Moslem #Islamisten #Migration

Man I love #SamRockwell. He's one of my favorite actors. This video is spot-on and hits every mark for why Sam Rockwell is the most underrated actor in Hollywood this century.

youtu.be/ohjQO1WyQ30

BRICS joins forces to fight tuberculosis and strengthen vaccine production infobrics.org/post/45482/

When you play with fire you're bound to get burned. Or more specifically... When you play in the depths of the ocean relying on material not suited for the environment, you're bound to be crushed. #OceansGate #Titanic

youtu.be/Bq8TCFGaOlc

کدام ملت؟ کدام سرمایه؟


در رد مفهوم سرمایهٔ ملی

نظام سرمایه‌داری، از بدو پیدایش، بر پایهٔ مالکیت خصوصی، سودجویی فردی، و رقابتِ ساختاریافته استوار بوده است. با این حال در دوران معاصر، دولت‌ها با استفاده از ابزار «ملی‌سازی» تلاش می‌کنند تا این نظام را در قالب چارچوب‌های ملی بازتولید و مشروعیت بخشند. مفهوم «سرمایهٔ ملی» در نگاه اول، راه‌حلی برای تعدیل بحران‌های سرمایه‌داری و ایجاد توازن میان منافع عمومی و خصوصی به نظر می‌رسد؛ ولی در عمل نه عدالت اجتماعی را محقّق کرده و نه ساختار استثماری را دگرگون می‌سازد. نقد این مفهوم، بدون نقد همزمانِ دو رکنِ به هم پیوستهٔ «حکومت» و «مالکیت» ناتمام است. برای درک این مسئله باید از سطح ظاهریِ مفاهیم فراتر رویم و ریشه‌های ساختاریِ آن‌ها را در نظام جهانی سرمایه‌داری واکاوی کنیم.

حکومت

«حکومت» به عنوان نهادی متمرکز، همواره ادّعا می‌کند که نمایندهٔ ارادهٔ جمعی است؛ ولی در واقعیت ابزاری برای حفظ نظم موجود و تحکیم روابط سلطه است. در ایران پس از انقلاب ۱۳۵۷، شعارهای ضدسرمایه‌داری و عدالت‌جویانه منجر به نمایش ملی‌سازی گستردهٔ صنایع شد؛ اما این ملی‌سازی‌ها نه به خودگردانی کارگران؛ که به انتقال مالکیت از بخش خصوصی به نهادهای دولتیِ جدیدی مانند بنیادهای انقلابی و سپاه پاسداران منجر شد. این نهادها با ادغام قدرت اقتصادی، سیاسی و نظامی، شکلی از «سرمایه‌داری حکومتی» را ایجاد کردند که در آن منابعی که باید عمومی می‌شد در خدمت انباشت ثروت گروهی خاص قرار گرفت. کارگران صنعت نفت یا فولاد همچنان درگیر رابطهٔ مزدبگیری بودند و از تصمیم‌گیری دربارهٔ سرنوشت کارخانه‌ها محروم ماندند. این نمونه نشان می‌دهد که ملی‌سازی بدون تغییر رابطهٔ کار و سرمایه، تنها صورتِ مسئله را عوض می‌کند.

مفهوم «ملت» در این چارچوب، ابزاری برای تفرقهٔ انسان‌ها و تخریبِ همبستگی فراملیست. مردم به دست مرزهای مصنوعی به شهروندانِ ملت‌های رقیب تبدیل شده و تضادهای طبقاتی به درگیری‌های ملی یا مذهبی تقلیل می‌یابند. چه در شاهنشاهی پهلوی و چه در جمهوری اسلامی، سیاستِ «وحدت ملی» همواره برای سرکوب خواسته‌های قومیت‌ها (مانند کردها، بلوچ‌ها، عرب‌ها و…) به کار رفته است. این سیاست در عین تشدید نابرابری اقتصادی، مبارزهٔ قومیت‌های مختلف را از هم جدا کرده و از تشکیل یک جبههٔ واحد علیه ظلم جلوگیری می‌کند. در سطح جهانی نیز جنگ‌های تجاری میان قدرت‌ها (مانند تحریم‌های ایالات متّحدهٔ آمریکا علیه جمهوری اسلامی ایران) با شعار «حفظ منافع ملی» توجیه می‌شود؛ ولی در واقعیت، این نه حکومت‌ها که طبقات فرودستِ هر دو کشورند که قربانی این درگیری‌ها می‌شوند.

مالکیت

اما هستهٔ اصلی این نظام خودِ «مالکیت» است. مالکیت صرفاً در اختیار داشتن پول یا ماشین‌آلات نیست؛ بلکه رابطه‌ای اجتماعی است که در آن انسان‌ها ناچارند کار خود را برای بقا به ازای دستمزد بفروشند. این رابطه ارزش افزودهٔ کار را از کنندهٔ آن جدا کرده و به بازتولید نابرابری می‌انجامد. حتا اگر دولت مالک ابزار تولید شود (مانند تجربهٔ اتحاد شوروی) بازهم این رابطهٔ استثماری پابرجاست. تفاوت تنها در این است که به جای سرمایه‌داران خصوصی، بوروکرات‌های دولتی سود حاصل از کار جمعی را تصاحب می‌کنند. بحران‌های دوره‌ای سرمایه‌داری مانند رکود اقتصادی ۲۰۰۸ یا تورّم افسارگسیخته در ایران نشان می‌دهند که این نظام ذاتاً ناپایدار و ویرانگر است. در ایران، خصوصی‌سازیِ آب و تبدیل آن به کالا، منجر به خشک شدن تالاب‌ها و اعتراضات گسترده در اصفهان، خوزستان و… شد. این نمونه‌ها ثابت می‌کند که سرمایه‌داری (حتا در شکل دولتی) انسان و طبیعت را فدای انباشت سود می‌کند.

راهکار

راه رهایی از این چرخه نه اصلاح نظام، که نابودی همزمان مفهوم حکومت و مالکیت است. تجربه‌های تاریخی مانند کمون پاریس (۱۸۷۱) یا انقلاب در اسپانیا (۱۹۳۶) نشان داده‌اند که خود مردم می‌توانند جامعه را بدون سلسله مراتب مدیریت کنند. آنارشیست‌ها در اسپانیا با تشکیل شوراهای خودگردان، کارخانه‌ها و زمین‌ها را در اختیار خود مردم گذاشتند. تولید نه برای سود، که برای رفع نیازهای جامعه سازماندهی شد. در ایران پس از انقلاب ۵۷ نیز شوراهای کارگری در برخی کارخانه‌ها شکل گرفتند که البته این تجربه با سرکوب دولت نوپای اسلامی مواجه شد. این شکست‌ها نشان می‌دهند که بدون الغای مفهوم سرمایه، هر جنبشی در دام دولت‌سازی یا بازتولید رابطهٔ استثماری گرفتار می‌شود.

جنبش‌های معاصر مانند زاپاتیستاهای مکزیک، جایگزین دیگری را برایمان روشن می‌کنند: جامعه‌ای مبتنی بر خودگردانی محلی، مالکیت اشتراکی غیرمتمرکز و همبستگی فرامرزی. زاپاتیستاها نه تنها حکومت را رد می‌کنند، بلکه منطق کالایی‌سازی را از زندگی روزمره حذف کرده‌اند. در ایران اعتراضاتی چون کارگران نیشکر هفت‌تپه یا معلمان گرچه عمدتاً خواسته‌های صنفی دارند ولی می‌توانند سنگ بنایی برای خودسازماندهی فراتر از چارچوب‌های دولتی باشند.

نتیجه آن که مفهوم «سرمایهٔ ملی» ادعایی بیش نیست. این مفهوم نمی‌پذیرد که مشکل اصلی نه در نوع «مالکیت» یا «دولت»، که در خودِ رابطهٔ اجتماعیِ سرمایه و جداسازی انسان‌ها در قالب «ملت»هاست. تا زمانی که کار انسان به کالایی برای مبادله تبدیل می‌شود، تا زمانی که مرزها انسان‌ها را از هم جدا می‌کنند و تا زمانی که حکومت انحصار خشونت را در دست دارد، هیچ مفهومی که ضامن نابودی این سازوکارها نباشد قادر به تحقق عدالت نخواهد بود. ما با تأکید بر الغای همزمان مالکیت و حکومت، جامعه‌ای را تصویر می‌کنیم که در آن منابع طبیعی و ابزار تولید در اختیار همگان بوده و تصمیم‌گیری‌ها به جای نهادهای متمرکز، در شوراهای محلی و فدراسیون‌های افقی انجام می‌گیرد. این آرمان شاید امروز دوردست به نظر برسد؛ ولی تاریخ نشان داده است که نطفه‌های آن همواره در مبارزات مردمی زنده است.

in reply to danialbehzadi

۱- درسته که در سرمایه‌داری دولتی باز تصمیم دست خود کارگرها نیست ولی میشه گفت اگر دولت دموکراتیک باشه تصمیم بنگاه‌ها، که دولتی هستند، دست مردمه.
۲- قبول دارم درگیری ملی بحث ذلیلیه ولی درگیری مذهبی نه. مذهب، حداقل اسلام، میتونه باعث نابودی سرمایه‌داری بشه.
۳- نمیدونم چقدر در بین قومیت‌های مختلف بودید ولی قومیت‌ها هم خواستار از بین رفتن ملیت نیستن بلکه خواستار اینن که ملیتی داشته باشن که فقط شامل قوم خودشون باشه.

When Sir #RichardAttenborough eventually steps down, I hope they consider passing the torch to #BillBailey. I know he's a #comedian, and I adore his humor (he's one of my favorites), but I've never heard him refer to himself as a #naturalist before (he may even be a naturist but honestly I don't want to know). Regardless, I do see him as a naturalist. I've heard him talk on QI and other shows not just about his love for animals, but also about his adventures. It would be great for #Bailey to continue #Attenborough's legacy (if he's interested).

Just a thought.

youtu.be/XkCMAM8tASM

As the exodus from northern Gaza continues, Palestinians fear a ‘final displacement’ #Palestine mondoweiss.net/2025/05/as-the-…

LOL. Well this is weird. About 2 weeks ago my KDE Connect running on my desktop refused to communicate with any of my devices.

My devices could talk to each other. My devices could talk to my laptop.

Hell my laptop could talk to my desktop.

But none of my devices would talk to my desktop.

So today I gave up, broke down, and installed LocalSend on all my devices!

Now guess what?

Now KDE Connect wants to re-pair and reconnect with all my devices.

Little shit.

Applications are becoming sentient and self-aware I tell you!

18 Verletzte in #Hamburg.
Erst Empörung – laut, wütend, voller Vorurteile.
Dann: Stille.
Denn die Täterin war eine deutsche Frau, psychisch krank.
Kein politisches Motiv.
Wäre es anders gewesen – die Empörung wäre geblieben.
Mit pauschalen Schuldzuweisungen. Mit politischen Forderungen.
Diese Doppelmoral ist widerlich. Und gefährlich für unsere Demokratie.
Gewalt bleibt Gewalt.

Sensitive content

Unknown parent

mastodon - Link to source

controlfreak

Sensitive content

Eritrean authorities release 37 Yemeni fishermen en.ypagency.net/357526

"This week we really ramped up the focus on bug-fixing in preparation for Plasma 6.4’s release in three weeks. But we also managed to squeeze in a huge feature for the next release too:" This Week in Plasma: time-of-day wallpapers blogs.kde.org/2025/05/24/this-…

Die AfD sieht mal wieder Grund zur Klage: Die Leitung von sechs Bundestagsausschüssen steht ihr zu, aber keiner ihrer Kandidaten wurde gewählt. nd-Redakteur Wolfgang Hübner kommentiert die Normalisierungsbestrebungen seitens CDU und BSW und resümiert eindeutig, dass der AfD keine Gleichbehandlung zustünde. 👉 nd-aktuell.de/artikel/1191449.…

I'm gonna be honest: I DON'T GIVE A FUKC WHAT A MONSTER LIKE NETANYAHU OR HIS ZIONAZI MINIONS THINK OR SAY ABOUT THE PEOPLE WHO FIGHTS FOR #Palestine
Zionazis like him are criminals, monsters, murderers, torturing and massacring a whole country. Who the fukc think they are????
Arrest all of them like you arrested every single nazi official after WWII and take them to Nuremberg 3.0
#FreePalestine #FukcNetanyahu #FukcIsrael #IsraelTerroristState

Xi extends condolences over death of former Vietnamese President Tran Duc Luong eng.chinamil.com.cn/CHINA_2091…

#ICE Arrests #Mississippi Father at His #Citizenship Hearing, Threatening #Deportation


source: mississippifreepress.org/ice-a…

Kasper and his wife, Savannah Hobart Eriksen, never submitted that form, which was due all the way back in 2015. She had suffered a stillbirth, losing their first child, and in the days of grief that followed, the deadline slipped right past them. But Kasper’s naturalization continued unimpeded. He corresponded with #immigration officials numerous times over the next 10 years, and says agents never warned him that a critical document was missing. He paid taxes each year, reliably contributing a portion of his labor to the nation he already felt a part of.


#usa #migration #fail #politics #news #problem

Now, it's Ziplock Bags - what's next?? The air we breathe? Yes

x.com/WallStreetApes/status/19…

Ziplock Bags are now involved in a class action lawsuit after being linked to causing dementia“ I'm Dr. Clint Steele. I'm a brain & nervous system specialist & I help people just like you improve your life by improving your brain function, specifically around, preventing & in many cases reversing dementia & Alzheimer's disease.

For those of you that follow me, I did a video on this not too long ago ...

in reply to HunDriverWidow

Now for any of you that are doing this, guys, & this is one of the reasons I don't do this, because it doesn't make sense to me to put this in the microwave.

It's going to melt, it's plastic. It's going to get into my food. That's not good for me. So if you're doing this, you got to stop. Here's what happens.

There's two ingredients in this plastic bag called polyethylene & polypropylene that break down and turn into microplastics.

in reply to HunDriverWidow

These microplastics are so small that they can actually cross the blood brain barrier. And this is how we're finding plastics in the brain

— Get the plastics out of your life as much as you can. And especially these”.

“Please guys, share this. I'm out to save 1 million lives from dementia & Alzheimer's disease & I need your help. We've got to get rid of stuff like this because it's damaging our brains & it's leading to end stage neurodegenerative diseases. So please share this.

At Least 50 Killed in Gang Massacre in Central Haiti tn.ai/3319868

Col. Douglas Macgregor Warns U.S. on the Brink of CHAOS if Israel Strikes Iranian Nuclear Sites odysee.com/trump-crisis-iran-i…

Good mofu morning fedi, my headset died completely this morning, the cord got snagged by my chair and they took a dive straight onto the floor, where they were then kicked because I have shit reflexes and tried to catch them with my foot so they wouldn't hit the floor. Now the mic doesn't work at all anymore, and the left ear has had something damaged badly, as it sounds really muddy now and I can hear something rattling every time the bass starts playing :jahy_pain:

Fortunately, the new ones are apparently coming in tomorrow instead of Wednesday, so at least there's been some good news today. Now I just gotta hope they're actually good and not just audiophile bait :awoo_worry:

Gaza, Israel, Krieg

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in reply to Michaela Maya

Gaza, Israel, Krieg

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New Report Shows Muslim Brotherhood Infiltrating French Republic Institutions To Lead the Country to Sharia Law – Macron Demands Cabinet Come up With Solutions to Problem

thegatewaypundit.com/2025/05/n…