Repeatedly in conversation with anti-Zionists, it seems the best they are reduced to being able to offer, is to carp on repeatedly about Israeli use of white phosphorous. Well that, and trotting out the ole' U.S.S Liberty incident.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USS_Liberty_incidentI wonder how far into the last decade of unguided random rocket attacks on Israel from Gaza - as capable of hitting a school or hospital as anything else - these anti-zionists would have made it if rockets were landing in their U.S. towns and around their kid's schools, without whining to their government to do something about it?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2eeGBv5JPEYhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sZMnM57UBmchttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palestinian_rocket_attacks_on_IsraelSince the rockets that are lobbed into Israel from Gaza originate from neighborhoods in civilian areas, and so-called "Palestinians" hide among their women and children to maximize civilian casualties for propaganda purposes, I was wondering if this tool was used to reduce collateral damage. So I
googled the subject and found it is used to create a smokescreen:
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from the BBC News:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/4483690.stmUS general defends phosphorus use
White phosphorous being used over Falluja
White phosphorous being used over Falluja
The United States' most senior general has defended the use of weapons containing white phosphorus in Iraq.
General Peter Pace said that such munitions were a "legitimate tool of the military", used to illuminate targets and create smokescreens.
Two weeks ago, the US admitted using it to flush out insurgents in Falluja last year - raising concerns that it might have hit civilians.
Initially, the military denied using it against either insurgents or civilians.
Correspondents said having had to retract its original denial was a public relations disaster for the US.
'Within the law'
Gen Pace said no military went to greater lengths to avoid civilian casualties than the US army.
He said white phosphorus, a chemical that burns on exposure to oxygen, producing a bright light and lots of white smoke, was used primarily to illuminate a battlefield or to hide troop movements.
WHITE PHOSPHORUS
Spontaneously flammable chemical used for battlefield illumination
Contact with particles causes burning of skin and flesh
Use of incendiary weapons prohibited for attacking civilians (Protocol III of Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons)
Protocol III not signed by US
"It is not a chemical weapon. It is an incendiary. And it is well within the law of war to use those weapons as they're being used, for marking and for screening," he said.
If it comes into contact with human skin, white phosphorus can ignite and burn down to the bone if it is not exhausted or extinguished.
An Italian TV channel has reported that the US used white phosphorus against civilians in Falluja, and showed pictures of burned bodies.
The US has denied this.
"A bullet goes through skin even faster than white phosphorus does," Gen Pace said.
"So I would rather have the proper instrument applied at the proper time, as precisely as possible, to get the job done, in a way that kills as many of the bad guys as possible and does as little collateral damage as possible.
"That is just the nature of warfare."