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Nuclear – now climate change: New book on how great powers have plagued the Pacific

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Author and journalist Dr David Robie speaking at the launch of the third edition of the Rainbow Warrior book Eyes of Fire in 2015
Author and journalist Dr David Robie speaking at the launch of the third edition of the Rainbow Warrior book Eyes of Fire in 2015 . . . he is also pictured in the background on board the bombed original ship. Image: Pacific Media Centre

Updated research has shown up lingering headaches over the impacts of decades-long nuclear testing in the Pacific islands and interventions of outside powers, amid growing threats from climate change, writes Dr Lee Duffield for the Independent Australia.

REVIEW: By Lee Duffield

The journalist, professor and peace activist Dr David Robie, was one of a media party on the ill-fated voyage of the Greenpeace ship Rainbow Warrior in 1985, before its sinking by French security operatives in Auckland Harbour.

He wrote a definitive book about the lead-up in the region to the fatal sinking of the ship with limpet mines; unmasking of the plot made in Paris; attempts to obtain justice and a long aftermath with demands for empowerment by former “colonial” people to prevent such outrages in their island homelands.

The book is Eyes of Fire, first published in 1986, then successively updated as the story unfolded, with new facts and consequences of the outrage coming to light.

Author and journalist Dr David Robie speaking at the launch of the third edition of the Rainbow Warrior book Eyes of Fire in 2015
Author and journalist Dr David Robie speaking at the launch of the third edition of the Rainbow Warrior book Eyes of Fire in 2015 . . . he is also pictured in the background on board the bombed original ship. Image: Pacific Media Centre

It ran to three revised editions, the latest out now to commemorate 40 years since the attack took place. It therefore marked 40 years since the death of the Greenpeace photographer Fernando Pereira, a Portuguese-born Dutch national, aged 35, father of two children, Marelle and Paul, drowned on board after the second of two blasts that hit the ship.

Eyes of Fire is a highly professional work of journalism, built out of investigation and documentation of facts, then fashioned into an accessible read; illustrated also with easy-to-comprehend maps and diagrams, showing where the ship travelled and where the bombs were planted against its hull, plus photographs from a copious accumulation built up as the Greenpeace movement generated publicity for its actions worldwide.

New Zealand author David Robie
New Zealand author David Robie . . . his book identifies same-old patterns of resistance in latter-day moves, successful, to get better recognition of the impacts of nuclear contamination and in moves through international forums. Image: The Australia Today montage

Voyage of the Rainbow Warrior
One section describes the Rainbow Warrior, appreciatively and affectionately: a former fisheries research vessel, a trawler type, 50-metres in length, with some difficulty converted for sail as well as power, made into a “proud campaign ship”, painted a strong green with a long rainbow-emblem along the sides.

“The wheelhouse was rather lumpy and unattractive but the rest of the ship was appealing. She had a high North Sea prow, graceful sheerline and round-the-corner stern.”

For the record…
The Rainbow Warrior sailed from Hawai’i on the Pacific Voyage — taking on board seven journalists and some leading figures from the Pacific communities, to the Marshall Islands — where it evacuated the inhabitants of a nuclear afflicted island, Rongelap, to an uninhabited island Mejatto on Kwajalein Atoll.
Pacific distances are great. They transported 350 people — with house lumber and belongings — in four trips, 250 km there and back.
Eyes of Fire: The Last Voyage and Legacy of the Rainbow Warrior
Eyes of Fire: The Last Voyage and Legacy of the Rainbow Warrior. Image: David Robie/Little Island Press
The islanders were suffering from contamination by the infamous upwind explosion of the experimental thermonuclear weapon, Castle Bravo, in 1954 — causing thyroid disorders, cancers and constant miscarriages and birthing disorders.
Dissatisfied that health officials sent by the United States administration were more interested in research than care, they decided to leave. The key instigator was the late Marshall Islands legislator Senator Jeton Anjain. He was one of two Pacific Islands leaders with prominent roles in Robie’s narrative.

The other was Oscar Temaru, a nuclear-free town mayor in Tahiti, also elected as the territory’s President on five occasions.

Temaru, now 81, spoke for many when he said:

“The sad truth is that the only ones who tried to help us are the Greenpeace ecologists…”

According to folklore among Greenpeace founders, a native American woman named “Eyes of Fire” told of a legend that where there was dispossession and despoilation of the land and culture, in time mythical warriors — deliverers — would come, who would mend and restore both. So the peaceship offering aid would be a “Rainbow Warrior”.

The author, Robie, in his news despatches for Radio New Zealand and other media (for which he was awarded the 1985 NZ Media Peace Prize, judged the evacuation project a change for Greenpeace towards humanitarian work connected with environmental destruction:

“This isn’t a game or the sort of action publicity stunt that Greenpeace would do so successfully.”

But the next part of the journey was another dramatic action, in Marshall Islands, at the US missile testing base on Kwajalein Atoll. A party from the ship went ashore, got through perimeter wires and hoisted a banner inscribed “Stop Star Wars” onto a space tracking dome, escaping before the arrival of security guards.

The banner was a reference to the American Strategic Defence Initiative, “Star Wars”, testing for which had increased the heavy traffic of missiles of different levels at the Kwajalein range (dubbed by the empire as the Ronald Reagan Ballistic Missile Defense Site).

The scene was then being set for the tragedy as the vessel made its way 5000 km to Auckland through friendly territory, calling in at Kiribati, the country hosting the former Christmas Island base for British nuclear tests (1957-58), and Vanuatu, where the leader of the then five year-old Republic, Father Walter Lini, a champion for a nuclear free Pacific, organised a big public welcome.

The strike
Celebration fitted the mood of the “Warrior” crew a lot of the time, in this account; a group of 11 skilled and idealistic younger people, sharing a mission they considered important to the world, and enjoying it as an adventure. They wanted to protect nature and promote peace, never violent, but charismatic, given to direct action, often enough dangerous.

They had others on board — in the case of David Robie, for an extended time, 11 days, time enough to get to know the characters and introduce them to readers in his book.

A further leg of the voyage was intended, to take them to Moruroa Atoll — where France was continuing with underground nuclear testing — as flagship for a flotilla of protest boats. In the event, the flotilla sailed, led by another Greepeace ship, Greenpeace III. One boat was arrested penetrating the 12-kilometre territorial limit around the atoll, where a series of tests was about to begin.

The planned disruption of activities on Moruroa may have been the death warrant for Rainbow Warrior — a solution to the riddle of what purposes its destruction was supposed to serve.

As the ship made its way towards Auckland, two French infiltrators got to work in that City, penetrating the Greenpeace operation. A group of military divers from a training base in Corsica was en route to New Zealand on a charter boat and two officers of France’s security service, DGSE, Dominique Prieur and Alain Mafart, flew in under cover as a honeymoon couple.

Rainbow Warrior came in on Sunday, 7 July 1985, surrounded by an escort of small boats and was sunk at the dock in shallow water just before midnight on 10 July.

Divers using an inflatable boat set off the two explosions. Prieur and Mafart were spotted picking up one of the divers on a beach by men doing night watch at their boat club, who got the number of their vehicle, enabling the police to apprehend them, and begin a tortured process to try and secure justice.

Photographer Fernando Pereira pictured at Rongelap Atoll
Photographer Fernando Pereira pictured at Rongelap Atoll  … killed in the 1985 attack on the Greenpeace ship Rainbow Warrior by French secret agents. Image: © David Robie

Aftermath
Updating of the book takes in the negotiations over holding Prieur and Mafart, their eventual transfer to France and subsequent early release; the fate of other conspirators spirited home, promoted, decorated, “looked after” in early retirement; intensive and large scale work by the New Zealand police to find out about the charter boat carrying some of the divers, said to have transferred them onto a submarine, the Rubis; and investigative work by the French press to sheet home responsibility for the attack.

Very soon after Rainbow Warrior was sunk, the Defence Minister, Charles Hernu, was sacked and the head of the DGSE Admiral Pierre Lacoste resigned. The book has a positive impression of the replacement Minister, Paul Quiles and the Prime Minister, Laurent Fabius, who admitted the obvious — that it had been done by French agents and was apologetic.

Subsequent negotiations between New Zealand and France, under United Nations auspices were made very difficult; a formal apology was avoided for some time; eventually both New Zealand and Greenpeace received financial packages in compensation and exemplary damages.

After the 1996 death of François Mitterrand, French President at the time, an investigation by Le Monde turned up circumstantial evidence that he knew of the attack in advance and a statement by Lacoste that he had approved it. Fabius evidently had not known.

Mitterrand’s motive was said to have been realpolitik — to support nuclear deterrence against the Soviet Union in tandem with the US, which supplied France with highly strategic computer technology.

Reviewer intercession…
Mitterrand, as a highly equivocal and manipulative politician, walked a tightrope, always watching his soft electoral margins — in this case knowing there was 60 percent support for nuclear testing in France.

In office for four years in 1985, it may have been a new government still failing to face down entrenched security identities, undisciplined, considering themselves to be “deep state”, attached to violent solutions, with potential to go rogue.

Most of Robie’s work here is a narrative, a strong true story, but it has space for analysis, and in particular registers the correlation between devastation brought by the nuclear testing, and colonial management and manipulation of islands affairs.

The post-war wave of independence had come to the Pacific, though not to French Polynesia nor New Caledonia. In addition, the United States still held its Micronesian dependencies in trust or, for Sovereign states, via signed compacts of free association, accompanied by substantial aid payments.

France’s position against independence is incentivised by maintaining colonies of more than 200,000 settlers; and in New Caledonia, the nickel deposits, around 15 percent of world resources, as well as the 200 kilometre territorial zone off the long coast of Grande Terre island, opening onto as yet unsurveyed undersea resources.

For the Americans, the priority has been both weapons testing and maintaining a strategic barrier against Russia, then China.

Old problems, future challenges
These considerations help to address the always unanswered question of what the plotters thought they had to gain. The book suggests a clumsy and excessive attempt to stop the ship leading a flotilla to Moruroa Atoll as most likely.

It goes on to identify same-old patterns of resistance in latter-day moves, successful, to get better recognition of the impacts of nuclear contamination and in the moves through international forums — such as the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, South Pacific Forum, United Nations agencies, the international courts — to get recognition and action on the impacts of climate change.

Pacific communities mindful of the rising seas, and other problems like impacts on sea-life, have struggled to get a hearing, finding, again, that “great powers” outside the region which hold resources that can help hold off the crisis, hold back their response.

Nuclear testing in the atmosphere was made to stop in 1974; tests underground on the atolls continued to 1996, leaving a very brief interregnum before global warming reared its head.

The current edition of Eyes of Fire has a prologue by Helen Clark, New Zealand Prime Minister from 1999-2008, a staunch keeper of the faith in a nuclear-free Pacific. Saying, “storm clouds are gathering”, she warns against renewed militarisation especially with Australia and perhaps other Pacific states acquiring nuclear submarines under the 2021 AUKUS agreement.

It is time for “de-escalation, not for enthusiastic expansion of nuclear submarine fleets in the Pacific”, writes Clark in her contribution to the new edition. With its peace policy, New Zealand wanted to be “a force for diplomacy and for dialogue, not for warmongering”.

Clark warns withdrawal of funding from the United Nations, led by the US, is a new threat: “Its humanitarian, development, health, human rights, political and peacekeeping, scientific and cultural arms all face fiscal crises.”

David Robie reports on the 40th anniversary commemoration of the 1985 events by Greenpeace, sending the new purpose-built ship, the new Rainbow Warrior, sometimes known as Rainbow Warrior III, to carry out independent radiation research. He follows up the lives and careers of the crew members and the islanders they worked with, several of whom have passed away.

While the writer’s own message, as in much good journalism, emerges from true handling of the facts, Robie does privilege a quotation from the executive director of Greenpeace Aotearoa, Russel Norman, on the crew of Rainbow Warrior, to close the story:

“They faced down a nuclear threat to the habitability of the Pacific. Do we have the courage and wits to face down the biodiversity and climate crises facing humanity, crises that threaten the habitability of planet Earth?”

Dr Lee Duffield on board the Rainbow Warrior
Dr Lee Duffield on board the Rainbow Warrior in Fremantle, WA. Image: Independent Australia

Dr Lee Duffield reported on Australia’s dispute with France over atmospheric testing for ABC News in Sydney and then from Paris as the ABC European Correspondent. His work entailed monitoring police actions against Kanak activists in New Caledonia, including the killings on Ouvéa Island; confrontations with French Ministers over the test programme; and negotiations between France and New Zealand, in Paris, on Rainbow Warrior, especially the jailing then early release of Dominique Prieur and Alain Mafart. He later taught Journalism at QUT in Brisbane and was a contributor to Pacific Journalism Review. Dr Duffield is also one of the co-owners of Independent Australia, and the chair of its editorial board. This review is republished from the Independent Australia with permission.

Banners for Humanity stage powerful community MSF medical fundraiser event

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The Banners whānau completed preparations in Shed Two
The Banners whānau completed preparations in Shed Two, installeding banners and flags, and photographs that reflected years of artistic labour and struggle. Image: Tony Fala

SPECIAL REPORT: By Tony Fala

Saturday, 18 April 2026, was a beautiful autumn day in Henderson, Tāmaki, Aotearoa, but with clouds gathering and rain promised for later in the day. I came to support my friends Simon and Mel from the Banners Crew and to perform kaimahi work for their fundraising efforts for Médecins Sans Frontières–Doctors Without Borders.

Corban Arts Estate was busy with families, workers, and visitors. As I approached Shed Two, the Te Tino Rangatiratanga and Palestine flags fluttered in the wind.

Some of the flags on display . . . Lebanon (from left), West Papua (Morning Star), Kanaky New Caledonia, and Palestine
Some of the flags on display . . . Lebanon (from left), West Papua (Morning Star), Kanaky New Caledonia, and Palestine. Image: Tony Fala

Inside, the Banners whānau were completing preparations, installing banners and flags that reflected years of artistic labour and struggle. Photographs and placards were already in place.

Banners Crew whānau Stephen, Maia, Stu, Matt, Simon, Mel, and the children, Josh, and Jim were there. Linda joined later, while John was not present as he was not well.
Simon provided important background to all Banners Crew organisation efforts for the day:

“We were planning for the event for months and compiling the speakers’ list. Planning stepped up six weeks out and went into overdrive for the last three weeks. We got the venue on Thursday before the event.

“That’s when we started loading in the banners and hung the drop sheet from the ceiling. That took a lot of effort and time…

“Another Banners member, John, helped us with the load in… Linda, another Banners soul, helped on Friday and collected some donated food from the Greek house Restaurant.”

All this extensive work laid the foundation for a formidable community event to come in the afternoon. In diverse ways, and on multiple levels, the Banners Crew had worked tirelessly to ensure all speakers, poets, singers, and manuhiri enjoyed a special community event and fundraising occasion.

The event started just after 2 pm.

"Stop Arming Israel"
“Stop Arming Israel” . . . among the banners on display. Image: Tony Fala

Opening the space
Simon opened the space just after 2 pm with songs on his guitar — “Stand Up,” “Free Palestine,” and the classic Aotearoa movement song, “Nga Iwi E.”

Simon with Maia and Mel
Simon with Maia and Mel. Image: Tony Fala

As the MC, he invited his daughters to deliver a karakia in beautiful Te Reo. He then welcomed the first speaker, Stephen Woodward of the Banners Whānau.

Stephen Woodward
Stephen Woodward . . . explains that the group has changed its name from Banners for Palestine to Banners for Humanity. Image: Tony Fala

Stephen Woodward
Stephen greeted the audience warmly and explained that the group had changed its name from Banners for Palestine to Banners for Humanity. He thanked Corbans Arts for their support and acknowledged all speakers and performers who had contributed to the kaupapa.

Stephen spoke about the important work of Doctors Without Borders (MSF), and he encouraged the audience to give generously. His words were met with strong applause.

Simon with his daughters singing in Te Reo
Simon with his daughters singing in Te Reo. Image: Tony Fala

MSF video presentation
Simon reminded the audience that the day’s kaupapa was to support MSF. A video presentation followed, outlining MSF’s founding in 1971, its 1999 Nobel Peace Prize, and its mission to provide medical care without discrimination.

The video highlighted MSF’s work in war zones, disaster areas, wherever people suffered, as well as its advocacy for oppressed communities. It described how MSF intervenes in crises, how it authors reports, and how it advocates across the world in public forums.

The video centred the kaupapa and provided the audience with a deeper appreciation of this wonderful organisation and the mahi that they accomplish on behalf of others.
Josh

Simon introduced Josh, who performed a set of acoustic guitar pieces seated on the front stage floor. His music was melodious and calming. It encouraged people to pause and reflect as he performed. The audience responded with warm applause.

Palestine Solidarity Network Aotearoa co-chair Maher Nazzal and Maia
Palestine Solidarity Network Aotearoa co-chair Maher Nazzal and Maia. Image: Tony Fala

Maher Nazzal
Simon welcomed Palestinian leader Maher Nazzal. Maher thanked the Banners Crew for their tireless work across Tāmaki over the past two years and described how their mahi complemented the weekly PSNA rallies.

He spoke about Gaza’s collapsing health system in 2026, noting that only 10 hospitals remained operational and that Palestinian health professionals were being targeted and killed.

Maher emphasised the need for continued pressure on Israel and highlighted two recent victories for the Palestinian movement in Aotearoa — one at the Auckland Council and another at the High Court — with a third expected shortly. He praised MSF for delivering medical care to oppressed people and encouraged donations. Maher concluded by presenting Stephen with a trophy to honour the Banners Crew for their work for Palestine.

Maher and Stephen received generous applause.

Taipua and Delta
Two rangatahi, Taipua and Delta from Waitākere College, performed a powerful spoken word poem exploring rangatiratanga, te reo, Māori identity, and resistance. Their performance was dynamic, an interplay of two voices, multiple themes, in one performance. The audience responded with warm applause.

Leka Skipwith
Simon introduced his friend Leka Skipwith, a leader of the Rotokakahi struggle. Leka expressed solidarity with Palestine and acknowledged the work of the Banners Crew. He described himself as a “Haututu” and Protector, speaking about opposing a proposed sewerage pipe through his people’s wāhi tapu.

He recounted the 1886 Tarawera eruption, the loss of the Pink and White Terraces, and the ancestors buried there. Leka connected the oppression faced by Māori with the struggles of Palestinians and Iranians. He built unity between local and international movements. His kōrero received warm applause.

Community Fellowship Break
Simon performed a moving acoustic guitar version of Bob Marley’s acclaimed Black Liberation Struggle Anthem, “Redemption Song”, just before the event intermission. A 30 minute break allowed guests to share food and conversation.

Mel and her daughters provided a generous spread, and people from different communities — Palestinian, Tangata Whenua, Tagata o le Moana, Sudanese, West Papuan, Congolese, Lebanese, Afghani, Pākehā, and others — mingled and built intercommunal, inter-movement solidarity. The atmosphere was positive, allowing for people from different generations, communities, and struggles to meet.

Eva Maria
After the break, Eva Maria performed hauntingly beautiful Lebanese songs. She then spoke about Lebanon’s suffering during the 10 day “truce” with Israel, describing bombings of villages, bridges, churches, mosques, and synagogues. She said the 2026 invasions were worse than those of 2006, displacing 1.2 million people.

Eva shared her desire to return to Lebanon to live with her children and questioned whether calling for humanity toward the Lebanese should be considered “radical.” She described how Israeli forces warned communities to evacuate while simultaneously jamming communication networks, preventing people from sharing life saving information.

Eva urged support for Lebanon, Sudan, Congo, Palestine, West Papua, and MSF. Her speech received warm applause.

Achmat Eesau
Simon welcomed Achmat Eesau, a veteran of South Africa’s anti apartheid struggle. Achmat acknowledged Te Kawerau ā Maki and spoke about South Africa’s 2023 case against Israel at the International Court of Justice, noting the court’s 2024 interim finding that genocide charges were plausible. Israel is still on trial with the ICJ.

He explained that South Africa stands with Palestine because international solidarity — especially from Cuba, Palestine, Libya, and Iran — had supported South Africans during apartheid. He quoted lines from the Irish poet Yeats in the context of the fall of colonialism and empire, saying, “Things fall apart, the centre cannot hold,” and led the audience in the anti apartheid chant “Amandla!” with the crowd replying “Awethu!” His contribution was warmly applauded.

Chelsea
Chelsea spoke about the power of light over darkness and her commitment to Palestine and Lebanon. She performed two delicate, beautiful, and original songs. She received a generous applause.

Mama Lema
Congo’s Mama Lema . . . spoke of displacement, disease, and media silence concerning the killing and oppression of her people by M23 militia. Image: Tony Fala

Mama Lema
Simon welcomed Mama Lema from North Kivu, Democratic Republic of the Congo. Mama came to the event with her grandson. She shared the sad news of her mother’s recent passing and described how the M23 militia forced women and children into labour to extract minerals used in cars and cell phones. She spoke of displacement, disease, and media silence concerning the killing and oppression of her people by M23.

Mama said she was not a politician but a historian for her people. She spoke of land loss, the severing of communities, and the suffering of Congolese women. She implored the audience to speak for Congo and support MSF. Her speech received strong applause.

Rahman Bashir
Rahman invited the audience to consider the interconnected struggles of Congo, Falastin, West Papua, and Lebanon alongside Sudan. He performed two spoken word pieces addressing genocide, inequality, and the need for liberation across all regions of Sudan.

He encouraged people to help however they could — even feeding five Sudanese people could assist the suffering in his land. Rahman asked people to help the people of Sudan, Beirut, Gaza, and West Papua. His words were met with generous applause.

Mary Joku Ponifasio
Mary Joku Ponifasio . . . originally from Jayapura and she spoke about her father, Henk Joku, a senior OPM [Free West Papua] leader. Image: Tony Fala

Mary Joku Ponifasio

Mary introduced herself as being from Jayapura and spoke about her father, Henk Joku, a senior OPM [Free West Papua] leader. She described West Papua’s preparations for independence in 1961 before Indonesia’s 1963 invasion. She explained the symbolism of the Morning Star flag and spoke about West Papua’s rich natural resources, including gold, copper, and oil.

Mary recounted her father’s imprisonments, her mother and siblings’ escape by canoe to Papua New Guinea, and the family’s long years of exile. She spoke of the work of her cousin, West Papua independence leader Theys Eluay, and his assassination by the Indonesians.

Mary also mentioned two people her father always spoke of with respect — David Robie and Maire Leadbeater, both long time supporters of West Papuan human rights. She spoke of how her people were dehumanised as primitive people. Mary said she felt a deep affinity for Tangata Whenua, and she acknowledged Māori women and their Moko Kauae traditions.

As Mary left the stage, I approached her and introduced her to David Robie, who was present with his wife, Del. Mary, David, and Del met and later caught up after the event ended. Mary’s talk received warm applause.

Fatima

Fatima spoke for her people of Darfur and for Sudan. She said it was never easy to speak about Sudan and that she felt the world had abandoned her people. Fatima reflected on the 2004 Darfur massacres, where 300,000 people were killed, and on global indifference to Sudan’s suffering.

She spoke about anti Blackness against African peoples, where others profited off the deaths of African peoples, the exploitation of African resources, and the ongoing violence perpetrated on Sudanese lives. She cited an MSF report documenting how women in Darfur were unsafe against sexual violence and rape, and urged people to remember Sudan. The audience applauded her talk with generosity.

Amena
Amena spoke in solidarity with Iran, recounting the nationalisation of oil under Prime Minister Mohammad Mosaddegh in 1951, the establishment of Operation AJAX and the 1953 CIA MI6 led coup, and the repression under the Shah and SAVAK.

Amena said the same CIA tactics deployed against Mosaddegh were deployed against the great African independence leader Patrice Lumumba in 1960 in the Congo. She described the achievements of the 1979 Islamic Revolution, including increased life expectancy and women’s strong representation in medicine, engineering, and parliament.

She connected Iran’s struggles with those of Congo, Palestine, Sudan, and Venezuela, concluding that Iran would continue to stand and fight for its freedom. Her talk was warmly received.

Immense success
The event was an immense success, bringing together different community voices speaking to different, yet deeply interconnected struggles in support of MSF–Doctors Without Borders. Performers, singers, poets, and speakers from Afghanistan, Aotearoa, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Lebanon, Palestine, South Africa, Sudan, Tagata O Le Moana, Tangata Whenua, and West Papua all added their mana to the event.

One of the Banners Crew organisers, Simon, reflected: “All of the speakers were grateful to participate and share their thoughts and experiences. I spoke to all speakers before and after their talks.

“They appreciated the opportunity and felt seen, heard, and respected.

“I am so proud of them all and the Banners Crew for pulling off such a special event.”

More than $4000 was raised for MSF at the event.

Dr Tony Fala is a Moana activist in Tamaki. This article is dedicated to the tireless work of the Banners Crew. Fala has seen their work in the movements, particularly for Palestine and respects their contribution to the Palestine struggle — and other struggles in Aotearoa and around the world.

Amnesty slams Netanyahu, Putin, Trump as ‘voracious predators’

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By Anealla Safdar in London

The heads of Israel, Russia and the United States are leading the destruction of global human rights, says Amnesty International, describing them as “voracious predators” intent upon economic and political domination.

“A global environment where primitive ferocity could flourish has been long in the making,” Agnes Callamard, the head of the global rights group, wrote in an annual report on the state of the world’s human rights that was released yesterday.

In 2025, “sharp U-turns were taken away from the international order that had been imagined out of the ashes of the Holocaust and the utter destruction of world wars, and constructed slowly and painfully, albeit insufficiently, over these past 80 years,” she said.

In a news conference in London, Callamard said that most governments tended to appease the “predators” rather than confront them.

“Some even thought to imitate the bullies and the looters,” she said.

Spain, however, which is an outlier in Europe for its criticism of Israel’s genocide against Palestinians in the Gaza Strip and US-Israeli attacks on Iran, “is standing above the double standard that is destroying the international system”, Callamard said.

She argued that Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, US President Donald Trump and Russia’s President Vladimir Putin, who in 2022 sent his forces into neighbouring Ukraine, have had an “absolutely dramatic” impact on the world.

Their conduct is “emboldening all of those that are tempted by similar behaviours,” said Callamard.

“It is allowing for the multiplication of copycats around the world, and therefore what we are confronting now is much more aggressive and ferocious than what we had to confront three or four years ago.”


Amnesty shocking report – Global rights collapse    Video: Al Jazeera

‘Authoritarian practices have intensified worldwide’
Amnesty’s review of the state of the world’s human rights makes for grim reading, documenting attacks on fundamental civil liberties in most nations.

“Authoritarian practices have intensified worldwide”, the report reads, before running through abuses alleged in countries from Afghanistan to Zimbabwe in 400 pages.

Israel’s genocide in Gaza, Russia’s “crimes against humanity” in Ukraine, and the US-Israeli war on Iran were noted as examples of conflict in which international laws have been ignored.

In a section on repression, the United Kingdom is blamed for cracking down on the Palestine solidarity movement and Palestine Action, the direct-action group that targets sites associated with the Israeli military and is currently fighting a legal battle against its UK proscription as a “terrorist” organisation.

Afghanistan’s Taliban was responsible for further gender-based discrimination in 2025, the report noted, citing measures excluding women from education and work, while Nepalese authorities were said to have failed to investigate instances of gender-based violence against Dalit women.

Amnesty’s report comes as multiple conflicts rage across the world.

US-Israeli assault on Iran
The US-Israeli assault on Iran has killed more than 3000 people, while Israeli attacks in Lebanon have killed nearly 2400.

In Gaza, the confirmed number of people killed in Israeli attacks since October 2023 has surpassed 72,500 as the decimated territory is continually threatened by Israeli bombardment.

In Ukraine, more than 15,000 have been killed since Russia’s full-scale invasion began more than four years ago.

Conflicts in the Middle East are a “product of the descent into lawlessness, made possible by a vision of the world in which war-making and the killings of civilians are normalised,” said Callamard.

“No effective steps have been taken against Israel for its repeated, constant violation of basic standards of humanity.”

However, there is some room for optimism, Amnesty said.

South African activist praises World Court genocide case against Israel

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An
An "IDF = Murder Machine" banner at today's "Banners for Humanity" exhibition at the Corbans Art Centre. Image: Asia Pacific Report

By David Robie, Asia Pacific Report

A South African-born New Zealand critic of Israeli apartheid and ethnic cleansing today delivered strong praise for his home country’s genocide case filed with the International Court of Justice.

Israel is currently on trial on allegations of genocide with the ICJ in The Hague and South Africa has been joined by at least 15 other countries as accusers — but New Zealand is not among them.

Noting how global iconic leader Nelson Mandela spoke out in his lifetime in support of Palestinian rights, Palestine Solidarity Network Aotearoa (PSNA) campaigner Achmat Esau said South Africa was not speaking out of convenience, “but out of principle”.

Speaking at the combined Banners of Humanity and Banners of Palestine exhibition and concert at the Corbans Art Centre, Esau paraphrased the Irish poet and essayist W B Yeats’ famous 2019 poem “The Second Coming”:

“In a time when the world feels like it is unravelling, we must choose to be that centre — to hold the line for justice, dignity and humanity.”

Anti-apartheid activist Achmat Esau
Anti-apartheid activist Achmat Esau . . . “Why does South Africa persist? The answer lies in our history.” Image: Asia Pacific Report

A veteran activist of the 1981 Springbok tour anti-apartheid protests, he told the audience he was speaking about “camaraderie — a spirit of shared struggle, trust and solidarity” and how it shaped South Africa’s decision to take legal action against Israel at the ICJ and the International Criminal Court (ICC).

On 29 December 2023, South Africa filed a case against Israel at the ICJ, alleging violations of the Genocide Convention in the besieged Gaza Strip.

By January 2024, the court found these genocide allegations “plausible” and ordered Israel to take steps to prevent genocide, a legal order Tel Aviv has since ignored.

Support for South Africa
“Since then, multiple countries have joined the lawsuit action, and South Africa has submitted extensive to support its case,” Esau said.

Belgium, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Iceland, Ireland, Libya, Maldives, Mexico, Namibia, Nicaragua, Palestine, The Netherlands, and Türkiye are among countries joining the lawsuit.

“Free Palestine” banners at the exhibition
“Free Palestine” banners at the exhibition. Image: Asia Pacific Report

The ICC has also issued arrest warrants for war crimes and crimes against humanity against Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, former Defence Minister Yoav Gallant, and three Hamas leaders (all since assassinated).

“in response, South Africa has faced intense pressure — particularly from the United States — through political threats, legal opposition and public condemnation,” said Esau.

“So why does South Africa persist? The answer lies in our history.

“Under apartheid, our struggle for freedom was sustained by international solidarity — by comrades who stood with us in our darkest hours.

“That solidarity shaped who we are.

“Countries such as Cuba, Palestine, Libya and Iran actively supported our liberation.”

Hooded “Palestinian political prisoners held hostage”
Hooded “Palestinian political prisoners held hostage” at today’s Red Ribbon protest event in Auckland. Image: Asia Pacific Report

Mandela’s message
On Nelson Mandela’s release from Robben Island jail after being imprisoned for 27 years, he “honoured them, calling them brothers, comrades and leaders , because they stood with South Africa when it mattered most”.

Esau also cited Mandela’s famous pledge, “We know too well that our freedom is incomplete without the freedom of the Palestinians.”

Many other speakers, singers and musicans took part at the Banners for Humanity event, which was a fundraiser for the global medical charity MSF — Doctors Without Borders.

The performers included Simon Frost and his daughters; PSNA’s co-chair Maher Nazzal; Taipua Kipa and Delta Johns, Waitakere College rangatahi; Lebanese singer Eva Maria Chasson; Mama Lema Shamaba, of the Democratic Republic of Congo; West Papuan Dr Mary Joku Ponifasio; Fatima Sanussi of Sudan; and Bibi Amina, speaking about Iran.

Masses of protest banners on display included “End genocidal capitalism — Palestine forever”, “IDF = Murder Machine — your silence is complicit with murder”, “Luxon! Sanction Netanyahu now: End U$rael Illegal War$”, and “The more you oppress — the more we will resist”.

Earlier in the day, Achmat Esau had also spoken at a PSNA rally in downtown Auckland’s Te Komititanga Square to mark the Red Ribbon Global Action to stop Israel’s plan to execute Palestinian hostages on the 132nd consecutive week of Gaza protests.

“Tortured Palestinan prisoners” lying on the pavement in street theatre protest
“Tortured Palestinian prisoners” lying on the pavement in today’s street theatre protest. Image: Asia Pacific Report

‘Prisoners’ in street theatre
A street theatre performance led by the Artists for Sumud Ensemble and Under the Same Moon featured hooded prisoners (the protesters) and most of the crowd. The group was led by singers Acacia O’Connor and Eva Maria, and Uruguayan artist-filmmaker Eloiza Montaña.

Speakers included Maya Swaid from the Palestinian community and social justice engineer Syed Iqbal, chair of Support Beyond Boards.

Israel is currently holding more than 9600 political prisoners hostage — an 83 percent increase since before the genocide began in October 2023.

Swaid related how many prisoners were arbitrarily “taken from their homes, prosecuted and then incarcerated” in prisons notorious for torture under a military court system where they had no rights.

“There are also many women housed in these prisons and more than 3500 people who are not charged with any crime at all,” she said.

Palestinian community speaker Maya Swaid
Palestinian community speaker Maya Swaid . . . Palestinian “administrative” prisoners held with “No charge, no trial, no conviction.” Image: Asia Pacific Report

“No charge, no trial, no conviction. They are jailed under ‘administrative’ detention based on ‘secret evidence’ that they are not allowed to see in a system where they cannot defend themselves.

United Nations Special Rapporteur Francesca Albanese’s latest report has warned that Israel is systematically torturing Palestinians on a scale that “suggests collective vengeance and destructive intent” and that “torture has effectively become state policy” since October 2023, reports Democracy Now!

Earlier this month, the Israeli Knesset (Parliament) passed a law enabling mandatory executions of Palestinian prisoners by a 62-48 vote that has stirred global protests and condemnation by human rights groups.

“Release the Palestinian hostages – Free Dr Abu Safiya”
“Release the Palestinian hostages – Free Dr Abu Safiya” in reference to the Palestinian paediatrician and director of Kamal Adwan Hospital in northern Gaza, who was kidnapped detained by Israeli military forces in December 2024. Image: Asia Pacific Report

Gaza’s young, untrained journalists step up to document Israel’s war crimes

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Pacific Media Watch

At least 262 Palestinian journalists have been killed in Gaza since the start of the war against the besieged enclave, marking one of the deadliest periods for media workers in recent global history, reports Al Jazeera.

Despite newsrooms being destroyed and reporters losing their lives, coverage continues through a new generation of young, often untrained correspondents determined to document the conflict.

With international media access severely restricted, the responsibility of reporting increasingly falls on local journalists who work in makeshift shelters and tents amid rubble, facing constant danger.

For many, journalism has shifted from profession to urgent responsibility.

Al Jazeera’s Hani Mahmoud reports from Gaza City on the new generation of journalists, many of them young women.


Gaza’s young journalists document Israel’s war crimes       Video: Al Jazeera

Caitlin Johnstone: I hope the US loses and the empire collapses

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COMMENTARY: By Caitlin Johnstone

I don’t mind admitting that I hope the US and Israel suffer a crushing, devastating defeat in Iran.

I hope this war collapses the entire US empire. My only loyalty is to humanity, and being on Team Human in today’s world means being against the US empire and against Israel.

I hope the empire falls. I hope the apartheid state of Israel is dismantled.

I hope humanity is able to pry the steering wheel from the fingers of the ghouls who currently rule our world, so that we can create a healthy planet and a harmonious future together.


I hope the US loses and other notes              Video: Caitlin Johnstone

YouTube has banned the channel that’s been creating viral AI Lego music videos criticising the US war on Iran. The Google-owned platform claims the Lego videos somehow constituted “violent content”, but we all know it was to facilitate the US propaganda effort by shutting down effective propaganda for the other side.

Silicon Valley is a crucial arm of US imperial control.

It chooses to advance the interests of the empire at every significant juncture. It’s a branch of imperial soft power in the same way the military is a branch of imperial hard power.

The US and Israel have so normalised the assassination of national leaders that the mainstream press now discuss it as a standard military tactic. The other day The Washington Post ran an article by Marc Thiessen arguing that the US should “carry out a final barrage of leadership strikes, eliminating the Iranian officials who had been spared for the purpose of negotiations”.

“Iran’s leaders must be made to understand that their lives literally depend on reaching a negotiated settlement to Trump’s liking. If they refuse to do so, they will be killed,” Thiessen writes.

At some point one of America’s enemies is going to assassinate a US official and my replies are going to be full of shrieking, outraged Americans acting like I’m the bad guy when I say Washington had it coming.

Even if the US wasn’t directly responsible for the Strait of Hormuz situation, it would still be the last country on earth with any business whining about it. They’re openly imposing a fuel blockade on Cuba while complaining that nobody should be allowed to block shipping lanes, for Christ’s sake.

The Democratic National Committee voted to reject a resolution denouncing the influence of AIPAC in US politics. Eighty percent of Democrats have a negative view of Israel today. The DNC’s main function is to keep the Democratic Party and its representation on the ballot from reflecting the will of the public.

Dear Trump supporters, send me all of your money. I have a plan to make America great again. I will end all the wars and drain the swamp. Don’t worry if it looks like I’m not doing any of those things, I’m playing 4d chess, trust the plan. Send me your life savings right now.

It’s important not to let them pin this all on Trump, in the same way it’s important not to let them pin Israel’s crimes on Netanyahu. Everything we are seeing with this disastrous Iran war is the product of the entire power structure which gave rise to it, not one guy’s dopey decisions.

The warmongers in the DC swamp have been pushing war with Iran for decades. Trump is just the guy who was chosen by Zionist oligarchs and bloodthirsty empire managers to carry out the deed. He happens to be the face on the operation, but if it wasn’t him it would have been someone else.

American warmongering insanity didn’t start with Trump, and it isn’t going to end with him either. Don’t direct your rage merely at the fleeting puppets who come and go from the imperial stage as the US murder machine trudges onward. Direct it at the empire itself.

Caitlin Johnstone is an Australian independent journalist and poet. Her articles include The UN Torture Report On Assange Is An Indictment Of Our Entire Society. She publishes a website and Caitlin’s Newsletter. This article is republished with permission.

Protesters rally across Aotearoa in condemnation of Israel, US ‘warmongering’ and ‘shameful’ NZ

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By David Robie, Asia Pacific Report

Thousands of protesters took part in the “Stop Wars Aotearoa” rallies across New Zealand today, calling for an end to the illegal war on Iran and the brutal onslaught on Lebanon this week breaching a fragile two-week truce.

While high-powered delegations from Iran and the United States were arriving in Islamabad for historic mediation talks being brokered by Pakistan, protesters in Auckland, Christchurch and other places across New Zealand were challenging the US and Israeli “warmongering” and criticising the New Zealand government’s “shameful” stance.

Led by US Vice-President JD Vance, the Americans arrived to take part in direct talks with their Iranian foes for the first time since the Islamic Revolution in 1979.

Stop Wars Aotearoa organiser Joe Carolan
Stop Wars Aotearoa organiser Joe Carolan . . . “No liberation for women – or anyone in Iran” from the US-Israeli attacks. Image: Asia Pacific Report

Ironically, Americans living in New Zealand were among those protesting in Auckland.

Kelby Dalton of Americans Abroad Against the War told the cheering crowd in Aotea Square that many of his compatriots condemned the US warmongering under President Donald Trump and were leaving the US in droves – not because they hated America, but because “we love America” and want the destructive political direction to change.

Stop Wars Aotearoa organiser Joe Carolan declared the protesters opposed all wars and championed freedom – “We’re going to stand up for the people of Iran, stand up for the people of Palestine, stand up for the people of Lebanon, stand up for the people of Venezuela, stand up for the people of Cuba, stand up for this fight against the American empire.”

Carolan said: “We will not be provoked by those who believe in violence down at the US Consulate, those who say that violence can bring freedom, those who think that Netanyahu can guarantee women’s rights in Iran.

“Are you joking?

Counter-protest
He was referring to a small counter-protest of Israel-supporting and monarchist Iranians outside the US Consulate in downtown Auckland who were calling for resumed bombing of Iran.

“These people are guilty of a genocide where 60,000 people have been killed [in Gaza].

Protesters in the "die-in" in the street outside the US Consulate in Auckland marking the slaughter of 168 Iranian schoolgirls by US bombs in Minab on the opening day of the war
Protesters in the “die-in” in the street outside the US Consulate in Auckland marking the slaughter of 168 Iranian schoolgirls by US bombs in Minab on the opening day of the war. Image: Asia Pacific Report

“No liberation for women – or anyone in Iran – can come from the pedophile Donald Trump or the genocider Netanyahu.”

The protesters marched to the US Consulate at the Citygroup Building in Customs Street and staged a “die-in” to mark the targeted slaughter of 168 children at the Shajareh Tayyebeh girls’ elementary school in the southeastern Iranian city of Minab by US bombs.

This tragedy took place on February 28, the opening day of the illegal and unprovoked US-Israel war on the Islamic Republic.


Mass die-in at “Stop The War” rally                        Video: Paul Taylor

Bill Bradford of the Workers First Union and Filipino community advocate Mikee Santos and a group of Filipino union activists spoke out about how the US military machine and imperialism had exploited migrant communities around the world, especially in the Middle East.

A wide range of speakers, politicians, civil society leaders and trade unionists earlier addressed the main rally, including Palestine Solidarity Network Aotearoa’s co-chair Maher Nazzal — “we cannot all be free until Palestine is free” — Labour Party’s Phil Twyford; Green Party’s Ricardo Menéndez-March, Alliance Party’s Victor Billot, Council of Trade Unions’ president Sandra Grey and the union choir.

Palestine Solidarity Network Aotearoa's Neil Scott and protesters marching in the Stop Wars Aotearoa rally in Auckland's Queen Street
Palestine Solidarity Network Aotearoa’s Neil Scott and protesters marching in the Stop Wars Aotearoa rally in Auckland’s Queen Street today. Image: Asia Pacific Report

‘Standing with peace and justice’
Two displaced Afghani women speakers thanked everybody for “standing up against American and Israeli imperialism — and for standing with justice and peace”.

Miriam Majud recited a 13th-century humanist poem “Bani Adam” (“Sons of Adam” or “Human Beings”) by Iranian Sufi poet Saadi Shirazi, in Farsi (Persian) and in English.

Bibi Amena gave a speech highlighting Iranian achievements for women in contrast to mainstream media reports.

“I am not from Iran, and I have never visited Iran. But I want to talk about what Iran has done for my people,” she said.

Two Afghani women speaking about the illegal and unprovoked war on Iran
Two Afghani women speaking about the illegal and unprovoked war on Iran today. Image: Asia Pacific Report

“In 1979, when the Soviets invaded Afghanistan, Iran opened its borders for us. In 2001, when American and NATO forces invaded and brutally occupied Afghanistan, Iran once again opened its borders.

“For 40 years, Iran hosted millions of Afghan refugees — not in camps, but in cities among their own citizens. They gave us homes, schools, hospitals. They gave us a life of dignity.

“Now the same America that destroyed my home Afghanistan attacks Iran. The same Israel that bombs Gaza bombs Iran.

Today I stand with Iran because yesterday Iran stood with my people — just as Iran has and continues to stand with Palestine, with Yemen, Cuba, Lebanon, Venezuela and with every other oppressed nation fighting for freedom from the chains of neocolonialism.”

She pointed out that while the regimes in Washington and Tel Aviv “love to pretend they care about women’s rights — it’s only while bombing them”.

“Today, Iran’s female literacy rate is 99 percent, one of the highest in the world. Over 60 percent of Iranian university students in science and engineering are women,” she said.

“Again, one of the highest statistics in the world. 49 percent of doctors in Iran are women.

“Iranian women are engineers, pilots, doctors, judges, parliamentarians, and professors. They lead pro-government rallies, they guard their bridges and power plants against US and Israeli bombs.

“They’re not waiting for permission from Tel Aviv or Washington.”

PSNA's co-chair Maher Nazzal speaking at Auckland's Aotea Square
PSNA’s co-chair Maher Nazzal speaking at Auckland’s Aotea Square today. Image: Asia Pacific Report

‘We can bring change’
In Otautahi Christchurch, Iranian-Kiwi columnist and writer Donna Miles told protesters that New Zealand and the world ought to leave Iran to sort out its own future free of global interference.

Iranian-Kiwi activist and writer Donna Miles
Iranian-Kiwi activist and writer Donna Miles . . . “Peace in the Middle East is possible.” Image: PSNA Ōtautahi screenshot

“We can bring change. We have brought change. And we can do so if Iranians are left alone — if sanctions are lifted, if the middle class in Iran are able to breathe. And if civil society is able to thrive.

“This is what we need. Leave us alone. America needs to get out of the Middle East.

“Peace in the Middle East is possible. It’s not unachievable. Israel needs to end its occupation of Palestine and America needs to end its imperialism.”

Miles also questioned the New Zealand government?

“How shameful it was to see [Foreign Minister] Winston Peters standing next to [Secretary of State] Marco Rubio soon after Trump made those tweets threatening extremist war crimes wiping out an entire civilisation, ending a country in one night, taking it back to the stone age — and we have a minister who stood there silent.”

Her critical comments came just days after her article in The Press warning that US President Trump “can’t kill off Iranians’ resilient spirit”.

PSNA's Del Abcede and other protesters in Aotea Square
PSNA’s Del Abcede and other protesters in Aotea Square today. Image: Asia Pacific Report
Americans Abroad Against The War protesters in the Auckland march against the US Consulate
Americans Abroad Against The War protesters in today’s Auckland march against the US Consulate. Image: Asia Pacific Report

What on earth just happened? Trump, Iran, and the unlikely ceasefire

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COMMENTARY: By Trita Parsi

Yesterday began with Donald Trump issuing genocidal threats against Iran on social media and ended — just ten hours later — with the announcement of a 14-day ceasefire, on Iran’s terms.

Even by the volatile standards of Trump’s presidency, the whiplash is extraordinary. What, then, have the two sides actually agreed to — and what might it mean?

In a subsequent post, Trump asserted that Iran had agreed to keep the Strait of Hormuz open during the two-week pause in hostilities. Negotiations, he added, will proceed over that period on the basis of Iran’s 10-point plan, which he described as a “workable” foundation for talks.

Those 10 points are:

  1. The US must fundamentally commit to guaranteeing non-aggression.
  2. Continuation of Iran’s control over the Strait of Hormuz.
  3. Acceptance that Iran can enrich uranium for its nuclear programme.
  4. Removal of all primary sanctions on Iran.
  5. Removal of all secondary sanctions against foreign entities that do business with Iranian institutions.
  6. End of all United Nations Security Council resolutions targeting Iran.
  7. End of all International Atomic Energy Agency resolutions on Iran’s nuclear programme.
  8. Compensation payment to Iran for war damage.
  9. Withdrawal of US combat forces from the region.
  10. Ceasefire on all fronts, including Israel’s conflict with Hezbollah in Lebanon.

The United States has not, of course, signed on to all 10 points. But the mere fact that Iran’s framework will anchor the negotiations amounts to a significant diplomatic victory for Tehran.

More striking still, according to the Associated Press, Iran will retain control of the Strait during the ceasefire and continue — alongside Oman — to collect transit fees from passing vessels. In effect, Washington appears to have conceded that reopening the waterway comes with tacit recognition of Iran’s authority over it.

The geopolitical consequences could be profound. As Mohammad Eslami and Zeynab Malakouti note in Responsible Statecraft, Tehran is likely to leverage this position to rebuild economic ties with Asian and European partners — countries that once traded extensively with Iran but were driven out of its market over the past 15 years by US sanctions.


US-Iran ceasefire                                                    Video: Al Jazeera

Also strategic
Iran’s calculus is not driven solely by solidarity with Palestinians and Lebanese. It is also strategic. Continued Israeli bombardment risks reigniting direct confrontation between Israel and Iran — a cycle that has already flared twice since October 7.

From Tehran’s perspective, a durable halt to its conflict with Israel is inseparable from ending Israel’s wars in Gaza and Lebanon. This is not an aspirational add-on; it is a prerequisite.

The forthcoming talks in Islamabad between Washington and Tehran may yet falter. But the terrain has shifted. Trump’s failed use of force has blunted the credibility of American military threats, introducing a new dynamic into US-Iran diplomacy.

Washington can still rattle its sabre. But after a failed war, such threats ring hollow.

The United States is no longer in a position to dictate terms; any agreement will have to rest on genuine compromise. That, in turn, demands real diplomacy — patience, discipline, and a tolerance for ambiguity — qualities not typically associated with Trump.

It may also require the participation of other major powers, particularly China, to help anchor the process and reduce the risk of a relapse into conflict.

Above all, the ceasefire’s durability will hinge on whether Trump can restrain Israel from undermining the diplomatic track.

No illusions
On this point, there should be no illusions. Senior Israeli officials have already denounced the agreement as the greatest “political disaster” in the country’s history — a signal, if any were needed, of how fragile this moment may prove to be.

Even if the talks collapse — and even if Israel resumes its bombardment of Iran — it does not necessarily follow that the United States will return to war. There is little reason to believe a second round would produce a different outcome, or that it would not once again leave Iran in a position to hold the global economy hostage.

In that sense, Tehran has, at least for now, restored a measure of deterrence.

One final point bears emphasis: this elective war was not only a strategic blunder. Rather than precipitating regime change, it has likely granted Iran’s theocracy a renewed lease on life — much as Saddam Hussein did in 1980, when his invasion enabled Ayatollah Khomeini to consolidate power at home.

The magnitude of this miscalculation may well puzzle historians for decades to come.

Dr Trita Parsi is the executive VP of the Quincy Institute and an award-winning author. Washingtonian Magazine has named him one of the 25 most influential voices on foreign policy. Noam Chomsky calls him “one of the most distinguished scholars on Iran”.

Protesters condemn Luxon govt for failing to condemn illegal war on Iran

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“No War With Iran” protesters in Auckland’s Te Komititanga Square today
“No War With Iran” protesters in Auckland’s Te Komititanga Square today. Image: Asia Pacific Report

By David Robie, Asia Pacific Report

New Zealand’s government was taken to task today for its lack of a principled stand against Israel’s Gaza genocide and the illegal and unprovoked US-Israel war on Iran.

Several speakers at a rally in the heart of Auckland expressed disappointment and anger at Prime Minister Christopher Luxon’s failure to condemn the war of aggression against Iran, one of the major supporters of Palestinian self-determination and justice.

The speakers from several cultures were scathing about New Zealand’s weak stance in the rally at Te Komititanga Square with a theme of “Welfare not warfare”.

Bibi Amena speaking in Te Komititanga Square today
Bibi Amena speaking in Te Komititanga Square today . . . “Let’s be loud and clear when we say that Israel and America’s war on Iran is illegal.” Image: Asia Pacific Report

The criticism comes as US President Donald Trump is reportedly seeking a record $1.5 trillion in “defence” spending for the coming year along with massive social cutbacks, according to a White House details released yesterday, while New Zealand’s budget allows for an unprecedented NZ$12 billion four-year plan to overhaul the country’s military.

Bibi Amena, a twice-displaced refugee from Afghanistan who has experienced the devastation of war and lost family members while resisting the Soviet invasion and occupation of Afghanistan, said the illegal assassination of a high profile head of state and respected figure among Shia Muslims around the world should have been condemned.

“At the very least our government should have condemned America and Israel in the strongest words possible,” she said.

New Zealand should have distanced itself from America and Israel “and their crumbling empire”.

Helen Clark quoted
She quoted former prime minister Helen Clark who at the beginning of this war described New Zealand’s response as “a disgrace” and that it was in the country’s best interests to keep advocating for international law.

“New Zealand is not a mighty country, and if we trample international law and forego an independent foreign policy, we are left at the mercy of countries far bigger and far stronger than us,” Amena said.

“Let’s be loud and clear when we say that Israel and America’s war on Iran is illegal — it’s illegitimate, unprovoked and immoral.”

A Tehran-born psychology student, Ali Reza, who migrated to New Zealand in 2013, was also strongly critical of the government’s weak stance over the war.

“Some politicians seem to have trouble with their spines. Iran has many excellent spinal surgeons who could help them with that.”

Ali Reza (right) with MC Achmat Esau speaking in Te Komititanga Square today
Ali Reza (right) with MC Achmat Esau speaking in Te Komititanga Square today . . . “Some politicians seem to have trouble with their spines. Iran has many excellent spinal surgeons who could help them with that.” Image: Asia Pacific Report

He praised the Palestinian resistance in the face of the 76th years “brutality, occupation, mass murder and mass displacement” by Israel.

“Meanwhile, the Sudanese people were suffering through a devastating civil war caused by the UAE (United Arab Emirates) and its master Israel. The enemy’s lies set records displaying psychotic levels of manipulation and exploitation,” he said.

“The enemy renewed their specialisation in the discipline of evil wrongdoings, pioneering in numerous fields, followed by their murderous campaign in Lebanon, Yemen, Iraq and Iran, all funded by the United States.”

Choice for Aotearoa
Leeann Wahanui-Peters of the Palestine Solidarity Network Aotearoa (PSNA) called for a choice for Aotearoa — one between “the security of our whānau and the lies and profits of warmongers and their masters in Wall Street, the City of London, and the shadow bankers of Black Rock and company”.

“A choice between a home, a warm home and weapons,” she said. “A choice between a future of justice, peace and prosperity for all and a past of war and exploitation for the few.

“For decades, we have been told that the world is dangerous and that the only way to be safe is to spend more on the military.”

“This is a lie,” Wahanui-Peters said.

PSNA’s Leeann Wahanui-Peters
PSNA’s Leeann Wahanui-Peters . . . “The greatest threat to the safety of a child in Aotearoa isn’t a missile from a distant land.” Image: Asia Pacific Report

The greatest threat to the safety of a child in Aotearoa isn’t a missile from a distant land. It is the coldness of a house their parents can’t afford to heat, or living in a car.

“It is their hunger in their stomach because their school lunch has been cut. It is the despair of a future with no jobs and no hope.”

And yet, said Wahanui-Peters, New Zealand’s “coalition regime” chose to be “fiscally irresponsible” and chose military assets ahead of the best interests of the country’s people.

A Palestinian and a Tino Rangatiratanga flag fluttering in the breeze
A Palestinian and a Tino Rangatiratanga flag fluttering in the breeze at today’s rally in Auckland. Image: Asia Pacific Report

Bibi Amena said New Zealand’s silence over Israeli crimes in Palestine “opened the gateway for hell” in Iran.

“In the past 30 days of aggression, Israeli and American bombs have slaughtered over 3000 innocent Iranian children, women and men.

“They have attacked and destroyed energy and water supplies, civilian infrastructure, oil facilities, schools and hospitals. All of these attacks are illegal under international law.

“So why has our government remained silent? Why do we allow America and Israel to commit war crime after war crime with impunity?”

Amena referenced the first day of the illegal war on Iran, an American Tomahawk missile targeting a girls’ elementary school in the city of Minab, killing more than 160 girls aged between 7 and 12.

She ended her speech with a short quote “which went viral on social media” by Professor Foad Izadi from the University of Tehran: “Iran is fighting the Epstein class of the world, that either rapes little girls, or bombs little girls.”

Organisers of the Stop Wars Aotearoa coalition said there would be a major rally with the theme “No More Wars” in Auckland’s Aotea Square and a protest march to the US Consulate next Saturday, April 11, at 2pm.

A “Boycott Israeli Apartheid” banner at the Auckland rally
A “Boycott Israeli Apartheid” banner at the Auckland rally today. Image: Asia Pacific Report

President Trump, don’t listen to your sycophants on Iran, this isn’t reality TV

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Politician and commentator Robert Reich's message to President Donald Trump
Politician and commentator Robert Reich's message to President Donald Trump . . . "You can’t pretend, sir. . . . This is for real. And the reality is Americans are worse off now and less secure than we were when you started this war." Image: robertreich.substack.com

COMMENTARY: By Robert Reich

Mr Trump, may I have a word?

Bad enough for you to insist — in the face of all evidence to the contrary — that you “won” the 2020 election.

But it’s another thing for you to pretend — in the face of mounting deaths and injuries, ballooning expenses, and rising prices — that you won, or are winning, the war with Iran you began on February 28.

“Let me say, we’ve won,” you told a rally in Kentucky on March 11.

“I think we’ve won,” you said on the White House South Lawn on March 20.

“We’ve won this war. The war has been won,” you said in the Oval Office on March 24.

“We are winning so big,” you told a fundraising dinner on March 25.

“We’ve had regime change,” you told reporters just a few days ago. “The one regime was decimated, destroyed, they’re all dead. The next regime is mostly dead.” Iran has now moved onto its “third regime,” and American negotiators are now speaking to “a whole different group of people” who have “been very reasonable,” you said.

You’re making this up
You’re making all this up. In fact, you’re losing your war. And so is America and much of the rest of the world.

After a month, your war has already cost 13 American lives, cost American taxpayers more than US$30 billion, cost American consumers at least a dollar more per gallon of gas than they paid a month ago, pushed up food prices and mortgage rates, and pushed down the value of 401(k) retirement plans.

It’s mangled supply chains for industries that rely on items such as fertiliser to grow food or helium to make computer chips. It’s also wreaked havoc across the Middle East with at least 1574 civilians killed in Iran, including 236 children, and at least 50 killed in Iran’s attacks on other Gulf nations.

You assumed Iran would give up its nuclear programme. Wrong. After more than a month of bombing by the United States and Israel, you’ve most likely stiffened the regime’s resolve to produce a nuclear weapon.

In this respect, too, America is worse off — more endangered than we were in 2018 before you withdrew the United States from the Iran nuclear deal negotiated by former President Barack Obama. In that deal, Iran agreed to restrict its nuclear programme — reducing uranium stockpiles by 98 percent and capping enrichment at 3.67 percent, and allowing inspections — in exchange for relief from UN, EU, and US nuclear-related sanctions.

Iran now holds a stockpile of approximately 970 pounds of uranium enriched up to 60 percent purity, according to the Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation. That’s close to weapons-grade. No one knows where it’s stored.

You thought winning this war would be as easy as abducting Nicolás Maduro from Venezuela and setting up a puppet regime there. Wrong again. The old ayatollah is gone, but the new one and his regime are even more radical and hard line.

Embraced asymmetric warfare
You assumed America’s military might would weaken Iran’s military capacity. Wrong. They’ve embraced asymmetric warfare — using cheap drones and missiles and blocking the Strait of Hormuz — rather than take on America’s and Israel’s superior forces directly.

You thought the regime would soon cave. Wrong. It’s been over a month and they’re the ones playing the waiting game. They think they can withstand the mounting political and economic pressures better and longer than you and America can. They may be correct.

Reportedly, you’ve told aides you’re now willing to end the war even if Iran continues to block the Strait of Hormuz. Maybe this is your best option at this point. But it will allow Iran to decide in the future how much oil gets through and for whom, and could cause the economic damage to the US to grow exponentially worse.

Mr Trump, do you really believe you won this war? Do you really believe America is better off than it was when you began the war?

Maybe the people around you are telling you that you’ve won the war and we’re better off because you punish the bearers of bad news and reward those who tell you what you want to hear. Presumably you’re hearing the same fictionalised good news from Republicans in Congress, from sycophantic leaders abroad, from other assorted lackeys and suck-ups.

Or maybe you think that if you can convince enough people that you won and we’re better off, you will have won and America will be better off. Because for you it’s always about public perceptions of reality rather than reality itself.

No truth, only belief
Everything depends on hype, spin, exaggeration, and outright lies. For you there’s no truth, only belief.

Or maybe you think that if you keep saying you won or are winning, and America has come out on top, your magical thinking will in fact come true.

But this isn’t a game, and you’re not a magician.

This is real blood and guts. Real pain. Real deaths and injuries. Real price increases at the gas pump. Real hardships for real people — in America, in the Middle East, and elsewhere.

You can’t pretend, sir. This isn’t reality television. This is for real. And the reality is Americans are worse off now and less secure than we were when you started this.

Robert Reich is an American professor, writer, former Secretary of Labour, and author of The System, The Common Good, Saving Capitalism, Aftershock, Supercapitalism, The Work of Nations. He is also co-founder of Inequality Media. This commentary was originally published on his Facebook page and is republished under Creative Commons.