The situation surrounding a new escalation of the
Palestinian-Israeli conflict shows no sign of getting resolved, with Tel Aviv already into the third week of its bombardment of the Gaza Strip, currently under a full blockade.
These developments are unfolding as the US signals its full-fledged support for Israel, while Arab nations and Iran have indicated their intent to lend a helping hand to the Palestinians.
Dwelling on
the Biden administration’s policy in this regard and recalling (as an example) that the US
“is illegally in Syria,” the ex-CIA analyst said that
“on the one hand, we [the US] want to tell very much the need to follow an international rules-based order, and yet we flout those very rules.”He warned that “the danger here now” is that major countries, including Russia, China, Brazil, India, Pakistan, and South Africa “are getting fed up” and that “the traditional sort of allies that the United States thought it could rely on in the Middle East are not there anymore”. They include Jordan, Egypt, and Saudi Arabia, who are “even refusing to take calls from [US President Joe] Biden,” according to the former CIA analyst. “So when you add all of this together, it is, you know, if we're heading for a collision and then on top of it,” Johnson noted.
The ex-CIA analyst also warned of far-reaching implications from Iran possibly getting involved in the current Palestinian-Israeli armed conflict.
When asked about the possibility of a war between the US and Iran in the offing, the ex-CIA analyst said he thinks “that's exactly where it's headed."
As for Israel, Johnson went on to say, the Jewish state is “choosing a course of action that's going to make it more difficult for it to survive intact as a nation”, something that he said remains “part of his concern.”
“We're seeing right now a level of unity between the Arab and Muslim world […], which is becoming very strident in their support of all of, you know, Hamas and the Palestinian people. So, I think we don't appreciate what we're up against,” Johnson noted.
Separately, he berated the US for failing to learn any lessons as he stressed that America “continues to believe that we [Washington] can use military force or the threat of military action to coerce others into changing their national policies, their behavior.”
In this context, Johnson mentioned the creation of Daesh*, which he said was “a direct consequence of US policies” in Iraq. He also singled out sanctions as an alternative to “military force”, restrictive measures that “have had just the opposite effect now, particularly in countries like Russia.”
He didn’t rule out that “there is a theoretical possibility of peace” when it comes to the Israel-Palestine conflict. "I mean, the first thing that would have to happen is [to] impose an immediate cease fire, stop the military operations and attacks on both sides," Johnson concluded.
*Daesh (ISIS/ISIL/Islamic State) is a terrorist organization banned in Russia and many other countries