Absolutely, I am more than happy and open to criticise the Israeli government regarding their dismissing of a humanitarian crisis in Gaza. It serves only to dehumanise and justify the extremity of their response. Have I posted it here? No, because this thread is absolutely full of this sentiment already.
This response has come from me highlighting a vile interview where the leader of Hamas denied the killing of women, children and innocent people in Israel by Hamas terrorists. But apparently you can't do that without having to also dive into a plethora of whataboutism. My bad. I'll be sure to note Israeli atrocities whenever criticising Hamas and other extremist groups in the future.
And to your last point, no - you're the first to mention it. Actually, Palestinians are treated like shite in Egypt and in Jordan. Nowhere nearly as badly as by the Israelis but they are far from welcomed with open arms. I'm not fecking defending this, it's an additional branch to an already awful tree. One of the many reasons for this is because the governments in other countries are fearful of the spread of extremism that may come with this.
Are you honestly suggesting that Islamic Jihadist ideologies aren't an issue in Palestinian territories? Remind me again of the charters of both Hamas and the PIJ, and the regimes who support them?
For the record - I am incredibly critical of Israel. I think their current government poses immense threat to all in the region, including their own people. It's a government that needs to be moved on asap.
I also, however, think largely the same of the governing bodies in Gaza and the WB, and without the reinstating of new governments on all sides you won't have peace and you won't ever arrive at a two state solution, however distant it may feel now. But it's the only solution - one that includes the return of land to the Palestinians btw - that won't result in the mass extermination of huge swathes of peoples from both sides.
I'm genuinely sorry if any of this is offensive in any way, it's truly not my attention.
Im not asking you to dive into a plethora of criticism. I was specifically responding to your point about how you would criticise Netanyahu (or I guess the Israeli government) if they claim that they're not killing women and children. I don't see the repeated comments about humanitarian crises as any different.
Without that I'd have left it because I don't actually think anybody needs to couch criticism of one side with criticism of the other at the same time.
As for the other point. As I've said, I've heard this kind of argument before, usually used against one group of people. The Jews. Whenever I hear it, I challenge of robustly. It's always the same. Well there must have been a reason why European countries drove them out again and again? There must have been a reason nobody wanted them. Etc etc. Except its now used to refer to the Palestinians instead. It's almost always used in the same dehumanising context. The message is clear. 'Nobody wants them. Not even their closest neighbours and cousins. So what the hell are the Israelis supposed to do with them? They're beyond helping. Only the iron boot can work with them, perhaps to eventually kick them out entirely. After all, if even their Arab cousins can't live alongside them, what hope do we have?'
That might not be your specific intention and I believe you when you say that it isn't. But I would encourage you to think about what you're saying at times and how it comes across.
The thing about other Arab countries and Palestinian refugees has been discussed previously and is of course way more nuanced than just a security concern. Of course there are extremist Jihadi elements within the Palestinian factions. Of course these are amplified a million times by their situation. Of course this will be a factor in howe they are perceived.
It is also very much the case that Arab countries already host literally million of Palestinian refugees. It is also the case that, and I know some on here will struggle to understand this because some struggle to see Israel as a 'bad guy' within this conflict, that they have seen waves of Palestinian refugees/ ethnic cleansing, who find a one way exit out of their homes and are worried that another influx of refugees will be a permanent one, as the others before them have been. That a Gaza ethnic cleansing will eventually become a West Bank ethni cleansing.
Their treatment has also changed with time sadly. In Egypt's case, under Nasser, they enjoyed more rights than any other national group in Egypt. Once Sadat signed his peace deal and became persona non grate for a while in the Middle East I guess, then yes the Palestinians became a nuisance, as Egyptian politicians wanted to 'move on' and avoid the hefty retaliation Israel can mete out if anything arises from your territory. Sisi is a scumbag, who uses the Palestinians as a punching bag for domestic purposes to cover up for the fact that he's almost brought Egypt to its knees. Hamas were an easy scapegoat in this case, who he and others in the media claimed were active in Egypt trying to shore up Morsi's rule (one particularly wild theory was that Hamas and Hezbollah were the ones who released him from prison).
Regardless of such attempts however, it is perhaps the single issue that unifies a very disparate group of people in Arab countries and there are sadly almost no Arab leaders who really represent their citizens' desires properly on this issue.