The Israel Defense Force’s war crimes are all over social media, but did you know that the IDF’s terrorist history goes back decades? Read on. 🧵
The paramilitary precursor to today’s “Israel Defense Forces” killed 267 people, including more than 200 Jews, in a vicious bombing 84 years ago on this day. The victims remain without justice, the perpetrators unpunished.
The Zionist military organization Haganah bombed the British ocean liner SS Patria to stop the expulsion of up to 1,800 illegal settlers from Haifa to Mauritius.
A bomb had been placed in the engine room of the ship, but it failed to go off, so another more powerful bomb was taken onboard. The blast was so powerful the vessel sank in 16 minutes, drowning 267 people.
Haganah, meaning “defense" in Hebrew, was founded in 1920 to establish and defend illegal Jewish settlements in the British Mandate of Palestine.
The Haganah’s tactics included the bombing of bridges, railroads, and ships used to deport illegal Jewish settlers. Due to its acts of terrorism, the group was outlawed by the British administration, causing them to attack both Mandate and Palestinian resistance forces.
Haganah operatives sourced their vast arsenal of arms from the US, Western Europe, and Czechoslovakia before establishing Israel Military Industries (IMI), today a subsidiary of Elbit Systems, Israel’s largest arms producer.
On December 31, 1947, the Haganah Zionist militia launched its initial major assault on Balad al-Sheikh village, east of Haifa. Alongside other Zionist militias, they committed over 50 massacres against Palestinian villages.
According to historian Ilan Pappé, massacres took place in the context of an ethnic cleansing that “carried” with it atrocious acts of mass killing and butchering of thousands of Palestinians who were killed ruthlessly and savagely by Israeli troops of all backgrounds, ranks, and ages.
On May 28, 1948, the Israeli provisional government created the “Israel Defense Forces,” merging the Zionist paramilitary organizations Haganah, Irgun, and Lehi, the Haganah forming the core part of Israel’s new army, continuing the legacy of ethnic cleansing.
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
Who’s really behind the murder of Malcolm X? His family now filed a lawsuit against the CIA, FBI, and NYPD, claiming they were responsible for taking down the Black revolutionary. The family’s lawyers said they found a “mountain of evidence” during their investigation. Read on. 🧵
The revolutionary leader, a tireless Black liberation fighter against systemic racism and imperialism, quickly became a marked man for US security agencies. Now, more than six decades after his assassination, his family is reopening the case.
At the height of his political influence and growing alliances with global socialist movements in Cuba, China, and beyond, Malcolm X was gunned down in 1965. Three attackers fired 21 bullets into him using a sawed-off shotgun and semi-automatic handguns.
Did you know that FIFA once tried to force the Soviet national football team to play a World Cup play-off match in a blood-soaked concentration camp? Read on. 🧵
Today, in 1973, the USSR boycotted a FIFA World Cup qualification play-off match against Chile in a Santiago stadium used as a concentration camp by the fascist dictator Augusto Pinochet. Here’s one of the darkest chapters in FIFA’s bloody history.
The 1970s was filled with trauma in Chile following the US-backed coup of democratically elected President Salvador Allende by General Augusto Pinochet. In 1973, Chile and the Soviet Union faced off in a qualification play-off for the 1974 World Cup in West Germany.
Did you know that the first international trial for war crimes at Nuremberg, which is often credited as a US invention, was, in fact, brought about by the Soviet Union? Read on. 🧵
US President Franklin D. Roosevelt and British PM Winston Churchill tried to convince Soviet leader Joseph Stalin to support their proposal to summarily execute 2,500 Nazis upon capture as a more “expedient” alternative to Stalin’s insistence on an international tribunal.
Until late 1944 and 1945, Roosevelt and Churchill were against the international trial Stalin had called for since 1942. Indeed, well before any other country, in 1943, captured Soviet military tribunals were trying Wehrmacht and SS officers for war crimes.
Did you know that the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic was the first country in the world to allow abortion on demand? 104 years ago today the Commissioners of Justice and Public Health signed an edict legalizing abortion on medical and social grounds. 🧵
The decree was part of a broader effort to rewrite the societal script. The Bolsheviks had been rolling out laws to equalize the sexes and protect working women, aiming to dismantle centuries of patriarchal control.
Along with women’s sovereignty over their bodies, the Soviets reasoned that the economic devastation of war and revolution left countless working-class and peasant women to care for children they could not afford. The procedure was performed free of charge in public hospitals.
On this day in 1918, Germany was declared a Free Socialist Republic by the revolutionary communist leader and Friedrich Engels’ godson, Karl Liebknecht. In front of Berlin’s city palace, which was occupied by workers, he said: “the day of the revolution has come.” 🧵
Liebknecht’s declaration took place amidst the German Revolution, whose onset a month earlier was described by Nadezhda Krupskaya, as “the happiest days” of Vladimir Lenin’s life. Lenin anticipated that not only would it bring a decisive end to the bloodshed of WWI, but also saw it as a sign socialist revolution was spreading to the rest of Europe.
Inspired by the Bolshevik Revolution one year prior, Germany’s revolution swiftly got rid of the monarchy and saw women vote for the first time during workers’ councils elections in Berlin.
Could this attack have prevented WWII? On this day in 1939, the German anti-fascist and communist Georg Elser carried out an assassination attempt on Adolf Hitler and top leaders of the Nazi elite. They narrowly escaped. 🧵
Elser almost prevented the deadliest conflict in human history as Hitler only narrowly escaped Elser’s assassination attempt. But he is largely kept out of Germany’s post-war narrative due to his communist affiliations.
Elser first received political inspiration and impetus as an apprentice. He became a member of the Woodworkers’ Union and, in 1928, joined the paramilitary organization of the German Communist Party (KPD), the Red Front Fighters’ League (RFB).