cross-posted from: https://hcommons.social/users/adachika192/statuses/113265687364473965
Open letter to the judges of the International Criminal Court - Yanis Varoufakis and Brian Eno
(Diem25, 2024-10-07)https://diem25.org/open-letter-to-the-judges-of-the-international-criminal-court/
------“Today, on 7 October 2024, exactly one year after the start of the latest and most brutal phase of the 76-year-old Israeli-Palestinian conflict, we feel the need to address you directly…”
“… When can we expect indictments from your Court?”
“… Today humanity needs more than ever a court like yours, where impartial legal minds from around the world can reach consensus on standards of legal conduct in war and its aftermath. Your role is vital, and we implore you to act immediately.”
(Appeal to the readers)
“Join us by endorsing this letter via [ https://i.diem25.org/en/answers/new?form_id=731 ]. You can also send the letter to the International Criminal Court. We need them to act as soon as possible.”@[email protected]
@[email protected]
@israel
#ICC #YanisVaroufakis #BrianEno #diem25
Completing basic military training doesn’t make you a reservist. Reservist is the status you get when you go to your annual (or whatever) checkups and are listed as can be called for active duty. You’re basically active duty but you’re not needed at the moment.
Reservists aren’t civilians. Look at Switzerland, they have a citizen-army with people holding their weapons at home with annual (or whatever) training and inspection of your gear. That’s probably a big reason why Switzerland stays neutral, because nearly every house and nearly every adult-aged male is a legit military target.
Calling the IDF reservists at the psytrance festival “civilians” only feeds into pro-Israeli propaganda.
Isn’t this what happens when you complete your compulsory military training? You can then be called for service at any time. I still don’t see the difference
No. Most countries do not require you to serve a month every year like the IOF does.
They’re still reservists in those others countries though, right? Fundamentally it seems like the same thing to me. And your quote says “at most”; I doubt every military aged person is serving a month every year
No. The yearly physical/readiness checkups are the key here. There’s the “reserve” pool of military-trained people, this pool consists of all the people who have completed military training. But this pool also has lots of people who gained weight, became ill, got essential jobs, are in education, etc. so when a country taps into this reserve they say “we need x number of troops from the reserve”. This is what happened during the partial mobilisation in Russia. Russia has a pool of around 2 million “reservists” but then they had to find some 300k within that pool who were in good physical health, not too old and able to undergo the refresher training course.
Israel, on the other hand, has an “active reserve”. Their reservists undergo yearly training, active duty and readiness check. Calling the psytrance festivalgoers “civilians” ignores the possibility that a large number of them had been active in the IOF in the past year.
Israel loves to flaunt women in the IDF, spreading their pictures all over social media, yet october 7 happens and all of a sudden every woman in Israel is a civilian. Give me a break.