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Harris’ VP pick Tim Walz and his views on Palestine, Israel and Gaza protests

Harris’ VP pick Tim Walz and his views on Palestine, Israel and Gaza protests

Minnesota governor is lauded by pro-Israel groups while being targeted by Palestine solidarity activists demanding state divest from Israel

MEE staff

Tue, 08/06/2024 – 18:10

Minnesota Governor Tim Walz introduces Democratic presidential candidate Senator Amy Klobuchar during a campaign rally at First Avenue in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on 17 January 2020 (Stephen Maturen/AFP)

Kamala Harris, the Democratic nominee for US president, on Tuesday confirmed Minnesota Governor Tim Walz will be her running mate in the upcoming November election against Republican opponent Donald Trump.

“I am proud to announce that I’ve asked @Tim_Walz to be my running mate,” Harris said on Twitter, making the announcement ahead of a rally in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

“As a governor, a coach, a teacher, and a veteran, he’s delivered for working families like his.”

The choice to bring in Walz comes after Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro had been seen as a top choice for the Harris camp. Shapiro has been heavily criticised in recent weeks for his volunteer service on an Israeli army base and for comparing pro-Palestinian student protesters to the Ku Klux Klan.

Walz, who is lauded for his progressive views and his pro-labour stances, has appeared to straddle the line between maintaining a clear pro-Israel policy stance while not drawing the ire of some pro-Palestine progressives.

While serving in Congress, he was a reliable cosponsor for a number of pro-Israel measures, including one in favour of renewing a 10-year memorandum to send billions of dollars in US military aid to Israel.

He has also previously met with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and was notably not on the list of 58 Democrats who skipped Netanyahu’s speech to Congress in 2015.

The Walz pick was celebrated by pro-Israel groups, including the Democratic Majority for Israel (DMFI).

“Not only is Governor Walz an accomplished and beloved leader in the state of Minnesota, having been elected six times to the House of Representatives and twice to the governorship, but he is also a proud pro-Israel Democrat with a strong record of supporting the US Israel relationship,” Mark Mellman, a chair of DFMI, said in a statement.

“As governor, he has been a steadfast supporter of the pro-Israel community in Minnesota.”

US: Josh Shapiro’s ‘volunteer’ work for Israeli army scrutinised as Harris eyes VP nod

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Over the past few months, the governor has appeared to show more openness to hearing the demands of protesters demonstrating against the war on Gaza, as contrasted to Pennsylvania’s Shapiro who compared the student protesters to the KKK and condemned UPenn for not doing enough to quell the protests.

When the Uncommitted Campaign – an electoral campaign calling on the Democratic Party to call for a ceasefire in Gaza – racked up 19 percent of the vote in the Democratic primary election earlier this year, Walz applauded the voters for being “civically engaged”.

“Governor Walz has demonstrated a remarkable ability to evolve as a public leader, uniting Democrats diverse coalition to achieve significant milestones for Minnesota families of all backgrounds,” Elianne Farhat, a senior advisor for the Uncommitted Campaign, said in a statement.

But given his voting record and ties to pro-Israel groups, it’s unclear whether Walz would move the needle in terms of one of the main demands of pro-Palestinian voters: the end to US military aid to Gaza and divestment from companies complicit in the war on Gaza and in Israel’s occupation of Palestinian lands.

Pro-Palestine protesters have been demanding that the state of Minnesota divest its financial stakes in Israeli companies and bonds, which they say are worth around $119m.

Activists have also for years been urging the state to repeal its anti-boycott legislation, which forces state contractors to sign a pledge that they will not engage in a boycott of Israel. The law was first passed in 2017, prior to Walz becoming governor.

However, he has made no moves to try to repeal the law.

In December, a group of 1,000 Palestinian solidarity activists in Minnesota disrupted Walz’s Christmas party, demanding the governor commit to divesting from Israel.

“Governor Walz has ignored our calls for the divestment of taxpayer dollars and public pension funds from Israeli apartheid. But he will never stop hearing from us or seeing us until he finally ends Minnesota’s complacency in genocide,” Christine Hauschildt of the Minnesota Anti-War Committee said back in December.

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US Gives Ukraine $3.9 Billion in ‘Direct Budgetary Aid’

Ukrainian Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal said Monday that Ukraine had received $3.9 billion from the US in the form of “direct budgetary aid,” which is disbursed directly to the Ukrainian government through the World Bank.

The aid is meant to fund government services, salaries, pensions, social assistance programs, and other types of spending. It has also been used to subsidize Ukrainian small businesses and farmers.

The US has provided tens of billions of dollars in direct budgetary aid to the Ukrainian government since Russia launched its invasion in February 2022. Shmyhal said that the $3.9 billion was the first package of budget assistance Ukraine received this year.

“This is the first tranche of direct budget support from the United States in 2024. In total, Ukraine will receive $7.8 billion in direct budgetary assistance from the United States this year, which will allow us to confidently pass this financial period,” Shmyhal wrote on Telegram.

The funds are being pulled from the $95 billion foreign military aid bill that President Biden signed into law in April. The legislation included $61 billion for the proxy war in Ukraine, including $7.9 billion for budgetary aid.

The $7.9 billion was included as a loan instead of a grant, an idea House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) got from former President Trump. But the bill gives the president the power to forgive the loan, or it could be paid back using frozen Russian assets.

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He Took the Only Photos in Hiroshima on August 6

Reprinted with permission from Greg Mitchell’s newsletter Between Rock and a Hard Place.

It’s in vain to recall the past, unless it works some influence upon the present. ~ Charles Dickens

Yoshito Matsushige, a photographer for the Chugoku Shimbun newspaper in Hiroshima, took the only pictures in that city on August 6, 1945, that have surfaced since and confirmed as taken then.

On that day, Matsushige wandered around Hiroshima for ten hours, carrying one of the few cameras that survived the atomic bombing and two rolls of film with twenty-four possible exposures. This was no ordinary photo opportunity. He lined up one gripping shot after another but he could only push the shutter seven times. When he was done he returned to his home and developed the pictures in the most primitive way, since every dark room in the city, including his own, had been destroyed. Under a star-filled sky, with the landscape around him littered with collapsed homes and the center of Hiroshima still smoldering in the distance, he washed his film in a radiated creek and hung it out to dry on the burned branch of a tree.

Five of the seven images had survived, and they are all the world will ever know of what Hiroshima looked like on that day. Only Matsushige knows what the seventeen photos he didn’t take would have looked like.

Soon his only prints would be seized by the occupying U.S. military. They would not be seen in America until LIFE magazine published them in its September 29, 1952, issue, hailing them as the “First Pictures – Atom Blasts Through Eyes of Victims.” This undermined, at last, the long media near-blackout on graphic images from Hiroshima and Nagasaki.   (Ignoring such evidence continued for decades, however, as charted in my book and film Atomic Cover-up.)
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Two of his pictures have been widely reprinted in magazines and books. In one, a ragged line of bomb victims sit along the side of Miyuki Bridge, two miles from ground zero, legs folded to their chests. It’s hard to tell if it is torn clothing or skin that hangs from them in tatters. No one cries out. They simply stare at what lies across the bridge: a tornado of flame and smoke rushing toward the suburbs. The second picture is a tighter version of the first, focusing on a policeman and a few school girls standing in the center.

All of the figures in the two photos have their backs to the photographer and are staring at the approaching holocaust. Although many in these images no doubt died later, neither of these pictures shows a single corpse. Yet the two photos capture the horror of the atomic bombing better than any panoramic image of twisted buildings and rubble (and so they had to be suppressed in America for many years). Perhaps that is because the people in Matsushige’s pictures are feeling more than the lingering effects of the blast – they are still experiencing the bomb itself. “Little Boy” has not yet finished with them or their city. The terror evident in the way the victims are standing or sitting in these grainy black and white photographs says more about the human response to the monstrous unknown than any Hollywood recreation.

And because the photographer has the same perspective as his victims we see what they see. We are on that road to Hiroshima, three hours after the bomb fell, staring into the black whirlwind. The pictures are so affecting because ever since that day, all of us have, in a sense, been standing on that road to Hiroshima, alive but anxious, and peering into the distance at the smoke and firestorm.

When Matsushige, recently retired, came to meet me in an eighth-floor conference room at his old newspaper – a small man, dapper in white shoes – he explained that he could not take more photos that day because “it was so atrocious” and he was afraid burned and battered people “would be enraged if someone took their picture.” He tried to capture more images but he could not “muster the courage” to press the shutter.

His photo of a military officer sitting at a table signing some sort of forms (possibly for medical supplies) for injured people nearby is haunting in its own way. In all the photos you can see (unless they’ve been airbrushed) blotches likely caused by the water in that irradiated creek.

A few weeks later, the American military confiscated all of the post-bomb prints, just as they seized the Japanese newsreel footage, “but they didn’t ask for the negatives,” Matsushige said, grinning like a cat. These were the pictures that caused a stir worldwide when they appeared in Life seven years later.  No photographic images of Nagasaki taken on August 9 have survived.  And the U.S. suppressed film footage shot by our own military for decades.

“Sometimes I think I should have gathered my courage and taken more photos, but at other times I feel I did all I could do,” he added. “I could not endure taking any more pictures that day. It was too heartbreaking.” With that, Matsushige packed up his belongings, bowed deeply, and left the room, vibrant in straw hat, blue suit and bright white shoes, carrying in his arms a portfolio of pictures that are utterly unique, and must remain so.

My article on Matsushige in Aperture magazine, 1986.

The Days After

My film “Atomic Cover-up” can still be viewed free for all at PBS.org in its “short” version or in full at Kanopy.

Thanks for reading Between Rock and a Hard Place ! Subscribe for free to receive new posts and support my work.

Greg Mitchell is the author of a dozen books, including “Hiroshima in America,” and the recent award-winning The Beginning or the End: How Hollywood – and America – Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb, and has directed three documentary films since 2021, including two for PBS (plus award-winning “Atomic Cover-up”). He has written widely about the atomic bomb and atomic bombings, and their aftermath, for over forty years. He writes often at Oppenheimer: From Hiroshima to Hollywood.

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